How about an isosceles triangle of which 2 of its 3 sides are congruent and 2 of its 3 angles are congruent
Well, for it to be a polygon it has to have: 1. Have straight sides ( circle is not a polYgon) 2. Have connect lines to form a figure 3. Must at least have 3 lines( triangles a polygon)
Every hexagon has six sides. That's what the "hex" in hexagon means. Every polygon comes in two flavors and the hexagon can be either one of them ... 'regular' or 'irregular'. If the hexagon is a regular one, then all six of its sides are congruent. If the hexagon is an irregular one, then 2, 3, 4, 5, or none of its sides may be congruent.
An isosceles triangle fits the given description
The sum of the interior angles of a regular polygon is found with the formula: (n-2)180. For a regular octagon with 8 sides, the sum of the interior angles would be: (8-2)180 = 1080 degrees. This only works for regular polygons whose sides and angles are congruent.
An irregular polygon is a plane (2-dimensional) shape which is bounded by straight lines that meet in pairs. If all the sides are congruent AND all the angles are congruent then the polygon is regular: otherwise it is irregular.
it should make a square leaned over
no it is not; all angles have to be congruent as well to be a regular polygon, and a rhombus doesn't have to have all congruent angles.However, a rhombus is a polygon.Neither because a rhombus is a 4 equal sided quadrilateral with 2 equal opposite acute angles and 2 equal opposite obtuse angles.Yes
rectangle
How about an isosceles triangle of which 2 of its 3 sides are congruent and 2 of its 3 angles are congruent
How about an isosceles triangle of which 2 of its 3 sides are congruent and 2 of its 3 angles are congruent
This polygon is a square (4 equal sides, 4 angles that measure 90 degrees). Convex * * * * * A square is just one example. The definition is that it is a plane (2-dimensional) figure bounded by straight lines such that the lines are all equal and that the vertices of the shape are also all congruent. An equilateral triangle is the simplest example.
Well, for it to be a polygon it has to have: 1. Have straight sides ( circle is not a polYgon) 2. Have connect lines to form a figure 3. Must at least have 3 lines( triangles a polygon)
If it is a regular polygon--meaning that all the sides are congruent and all the angles are congruent, then the formula for area of the polygon is A=1/2 ap Here a represents the apothem, which is the distance from the center of the polygon to the midpoint of one side. p represents the perimeter of the polygon found by multiplying one side length by the number of sides. If you only know one variable such as side length, you can find the perimeter and you can find the apothem using trigonomety.
isoceles triangle
Answer #1:A rhombus is a 4 sided polygon. However, for the figure to be a rhombus, it must have 4 congruent sides, but not 4 right angles.==========================Answer #2:Yes, it can, but it doesn't need to be.When it is, we call it a "square".
Every hexagon has six sides. That's what the "hex" in hexagon means. Every polygon comes in two flavors and the hexagon can be either one of them ... 'regular' or 'irregular'. If the hexagon is a regular one, then all six of its sides are congruent. If the hexagon is an irregular one, then 2, 3, 4, 5, or none of its sides may be congruent.