Pentagon would be the 79th shape.
There is a super easy way to solve this. You need a pencil and paper. Just draw out your pattern triangle, stat, pentagon, moon. Start counting the pattern over and over until you reach 79. Which ever shape you are on when you hit your number is your answer.
A pentagon has five sides, so a shape with two fewer sides would have three sides. This shape is called a triangle. Triangles are the simplest polygons and can come in various types, such as equilateral, isosceles, and scalene.
A pentagon has five sides, so two fewer sides would mean a shape with three sides. This shape is known as a triangle. Triangles are the simplest polygon and can vary in type, such as equilateral, isosceles, or scalene, depending on the lengths of their sides.
Yes. A simple case would be where they combine into a square.
Geometric figures in a plane can be 3-sided (triangle), 4-sided (square, rectangle, or, in general, quadrilateral), 5-sided (pentagon), 6-sided (hexagon), 7-sided (heptagon or septagon), 8-sided (octagon) and on and on in the polygons.
You didn't say it was a regular pentagon. For an arbitrary pentagon, you would calculate its area as you would for any polygon: divide it up into triangles, and add up the areas of the triangle. The area of a triangle is 1/2 times the base times the height, the height being the length of the perpendicular dropped to the base from the opposite vertex.
Pentagon shaped. i would have said trianjgular but its pentagon
That would be a pentagon...
The base would be a pentagon, while the faces would be triangles.
Yes. A simple case would be where they combine into a square.
An irregular 5 sided pentagon that looks like a hut would fit the given description.
as rectangle is to square I would say Rectangle is to Triangle. Because Hexagon-6sides, pentagon-5 sides, Rectangle-4 sides, triangle 3 sides. But that is just me :)
Anything with 5 sides, an example of this would be a house
A pentagon is a five-sided figure.
Geometric figures in a plane can be 3-sided (triangle), 4-sided (square, rectangle, or, in general, quadrilateral), 5-sided (pentagon), 6-sided (hexagon), 7-sided (heptagon or septagon), 8-sided (octagon) and on and on in the polygons.
You didn't say it was a regular pentagon. For an arbitrary pentagon, you would calculate its area as you would for any polygon: divide it up into triangles, and add up the areas of the triangle. The area of a triangle is 1/2 times the base times the height, the height being the length of the perpendicular dropped to the base from the opposite vertex.
That would be a triangle.
It is an oxymoron: if it existed, it would be a five sided shape with four sides!