there are many answers to a polygon ... A POLLYGON COULD BE EVERY 3-D FIGURE FROM A PYRAMID TO A DODECAHEDREN AND MORE
Not sure what a pollygon is! Also, 3-D figures are NOT polygons but polyhedrons. Clearly, the previous answer was written by someone who could neither spell nor knew what they were talking about.
A polygon has the same number of angles and sides.
No. A polygon has exactly the same number of angles as sides.
i don't really get the "same number of sides" ----- the angles of a polygon are the same with other angles within the polygon, if it is a regular polygon, and there a formula for getting the total sum of angles which is 180X(N-2) where N is the number of sides.
Any polygon has the same number of sides and angles
Polygons have an equal number of sides and angles.
The exterior angles of any polygon are as many as their sides.
A polygon has the same number of sides and angles.
No. A polygon has exactly the same number of angles as sides.
i don't really get the "same number of sides" ----- the angles of a polygon are the same with other angles within the polygon, if it is a regular polygon, and there a formula for getting the total sum of angles which is 180X(N-2) where N is the number of sides.
Any polygon has the same number of sides and angles
A polygon has exactly the same number of both internal and external angles to the number of sides. Assuming external angles count, there are two times the number of sides as the total number of angles
Polygons have an equal number of sides and angles.
The exterior angles of any polygon are as many as their sides.
All polygons have an equal number of sides and angles.
Any polygon has the same number of angles as its sides.
A polygon, by definition, has the same number of sides as it has angles. The question is therefore misguided.
A polygon has an equal number of sides and angles. For example, a triangle has 3 sides and 3 internal angles.
The addition of an extra side increases the total of the internal angles by 180° The sum of the internal angles of a polygon = (number of sides - 2) × 180°