The perimeter of a circle is its circumference.
ok one what grade are in because the circumference is the area around a circle
Yes it is the number u use to find the area and circumference of a circle
Circumference refers to the size of something as given by the distance around it, e.g. the circumference of a circle is the distance around it, or its perimeter. The circumference of a circle can be used in the following formula to determine other values in a circle: C=2πr, or C=πd, where C is the circumference of the circle, r is the radius of the circle, d is the diameter of the circle and equivalent to twice the radius, and pi is, well, pi.
the mean
mean: average
ok one what grade are in because the circumference is the area around a circle
Circumference is like the perimeter of a circle.
'pie' is NOT a term used in maths. 'Pie' is what you eat; apple pie, meat pie etc., I think you mean 'pi' ; Note the spelling. 'pi' is the modern English spelling of the Classical Greek letter 'pi' ; ' |-\ ' is the best I can do here. It looks like a soccer goalposts with a 'wobbly leg on one side. 'pi' when translated into modern English is the small/lower case letter 'p'. It has been used from Classical times , because it was found to be the 'constant of **p**roportion' for circle. In pre=Classical times, the Sumerian Civilisation. , and today, a donkey/mule/ox would be tied to a tether, to drive water up from a well. The animal went round in a circle 'chasing his carrot'. However, the length of the tether is the radiius and the circle was the circumference. It was noted that however, long the tether and correspondingly larger the circle. there was a direct proportion. Algebraically expressed as Circumference is directly proportional the twice the length of the tether(diameter). C directly proportional to d It was equated by putting in 'k' a constant of proportion . C = k d Algebraically rearranging k = C/d This ratio/fraction was always found to be 3.141592..... ' ~ 3.14. The Classical Greeks gave this constant of **P**roportion, the symbol 'pi / p' . Hence we use 'pi' symbol; today for circle calculations. pi = 3.141592... is an IRRATIONAL number, which casually means the decimals go to infinity, and there is no regular order in the decimal digits. However, in school , you are probably given ' 3.14.' , or '3.1416'. or '22/7 ' , for ease of calculation, but these numbers are only approximations. NB 'pi' . 'p' 'proportion'. Hope that helps.!!!!!!
NO!!! At best RATIO can mean unequal sharing. e.g. 1:3 mean one part receives '1' item , whilst the other part received '3' items. Ratios are often delineated by a colon, e.g a:b :: c:d The double colon is comparing the two ratios.
Yes it is the number u use to find the area and circumference of a circle
Basically, the circumference of a circle is the perimeter of the circle.
The words girth and circumference basically mean the same thing. Circumference is the mathematical term where as girth was originally a plantsman's or forester's term.
The radius bone sounds like a math term because "radius" is also a term used in geometry to refer to the distance from the center of a circle to any point on its circumference.
A c in math stands for Circumference. Circumference is the distance around a circle.
A segment inside a circle with end points that lie in the circumference.
it is a math term
the mean