A regular tessellation can only be formed by regular polygons with 3, 4, or 6 sides. These polygons are the equilateral triangle, square, and regular hexagon. Other polygons, such as pentagons or heptagons, cannot tessellate the plane without leaving gaps or overlaps. Thus, the applicable options for regular polygons in a regular tessellation are 3, 4, and 6 sides.
Yes, the only four-sided regular polygon is a square, because all of its angles and sides are congruent. This does not apply to a trapezoid, so it is irregular.
-- missing-- unseen-- not postedConvexEquiangularRegularEquilateralNone of the ones listed. Try invisible.
ABCD is a square, which means it is a type of quadrilateral that has four equal sides and four right angles. Classifications that apply include being a rectangle, a rhombus, and a regular polygon, as all sides and angles are equal. Classifications that do not apply include being a triangle or a trapezoid, as these shapes have different properties in terms of sides and angles.
convex, equiangular, equilateral, regular. APEX****
To find the area of a polygon, you can use different formulas depending on the type of polygon. For regular polygons, the area can be calculated using the formula ( \text{Area} = \frac{1}{4} n s^2 \cot(\pi/n) ), where ( n ) is the number of sides and ( s ) is the length of a side. For irregular polygons, you can divide the shape into triangles, calculate the area of each triangle, and sum them up, or use the shoelace formula if you have the coordinates of the vertices. Make sure to identify the type of polygon first and apply the appropriate method.
Yes, the only four-sided regular polygon is a square, because all of its angles and sides are congruent. This does not apply to a trapezoid, so it is irregular.
-- missing-- unseen-- not postedConvexEquiangularRegularEquilateralNone of the ones listed. Try invisible.
Three and polygon.
Well, I'd have to say...Polygon
it's not regular
Yes, "apply" is a regular verb. It follows the typical pattern for adding -ed to form its past tense (applied) and -ing to form its present participle (applying).
Apply yourself
An equilateral triangle is a regular polygon because it has 3 equal sides and 3 equal 60 degree angles that add up to 180 degrees.
It depends on the shape. Different conditions will apply for a circle, a polygon with n sides.
It is C. Rhombus
Apply it and monitor its purpose on a regular basis
An equilateral polygon is a polygon whose sides are all of the same measure. An equiangular polygon is a polygon whose angles are all of the same measure. A triangle is the only polygon where these two are effectively one and the same.. But it does not apply to polygons of 4 or more sides. A square and rhombus are equilateral but a rhombus is not equiangular. A square and rectangle are equiangular but a rectangle is not equilateral. This can be extended to all polygons with more than 4 sides but it is more difficult because they do not have distinctive names.