If by heaxagon, you mean hexagon, then there are 6 sides and 6 equal interior angles. 360/6 = 60 degrees.
Exterior angles of a hexagon add up to 360 degrees.
No, but sometimes "average" means "mean" - when it doesn't mean median, geometric mean, or something else entirely.
The answer will depend on who you mean by HE.The answer will depend on who you mean by HE.The answer will depend on who you mean by HE.The answer will depend on who you mean by HE.
There is no statistical term such as "deviation mean".
If by heaxagon, you mean hexagon, then there are 6 sides and 6 equal interior angles. 360/6 = 60 degrees.
6 sides
Exterior angles of a hexagon add up to 360 degrees.
The heaxagon had 15 perpendicular lines that were right angled. P.S. Hope this works for yall out there
Triangle has 3 angles adding to 180 degrees Parallelogram has 4 angles adding to 360 degrees Pentagon has 5 angles adding to 540 degrees Heaxagon has 6 angles adding to 720 degrees
A CELL is a geographic area ,an area of coverage given by the cell site (a point). Note, cell sites do not reside in the center of cells .Rather, cell sites are at the corners of the cell.A cell site gives coverage not to one cell ,but to different sectors . Try drawing few hexagons and then join their centers to form another hexagon.This new heaxagon is the actual cell and the centers you joined ,are the cell sites.
Well if you have caught tornadus, and either you or a friend has a thundurus then both of you look at your C-Gear(heaxagon gridish menu on your touch screen) and on the left side of the C-Gear it will say "IR" go to it and no matter where you are in Unova, the screen will have trade battle feeling check or friend code, using the C-Gear will only allow you to trade Pokemon in your black/white to another catridge of the same series. Once you have BOTH in your party, Landorus will be waiting at the Abundant Shrine
you mean what you mean
Mean is the average.
It mean what you don't what does it mean.
The arithmetic mean is a weighted mean where each observation is given the same weight.
The correct usage is "what DOES it mean"