The answer will depend on how big the two figures are!
The angles of a polygon are not directly related to the measurement of the perimeter. If you measure a perimeter of a pentagon in inches and then again in centimetres, the measurement number will change but the pentagon will remain the same.
Irregular Pentagon
no, because a polygon with four right angles is a rectangle
The perimeter of a pentagon is the sum of its sides. If it is a regular pentagon, just multiply the length of a side by 5.The perimeter of a pentagon is the sum of its sides. If it is a regular pentagon, just multiply the length of a side by 5.The perimeter of a pentagon is the sum of its sides. If it is a regular pentagon, just multiply the length of a side by 5.The perimeter of a pentagon is the sum of its sides. If it is a regular pentagon, just multiply the length of a side by 5.
Parallelogram Rectangle Square Kite Rhombus Pentagon Octagon Hexagon Polygon
A pentagon, which is a 5-sided figure, will have a perimeter equal to the sum of the lengths of all the sides. This will be true for any polygon; the perimeter of any polygon is the sum of the lengths of all the sides. If the pentagon is a regular pentagon, then the perimeter will be 5 times the length of one of the sides. For any regular polygon, the perimeter will be the length of one side times the number of sides in that polygon.
No it depends on the size of the polygon
The side of the Polygon's measurements multiplied by 5.
It could be a regular pentagon
The angles of a polygon are not directly related to the measurement of the perimeter. If you measure a perimeter of a pentagon in inches and then again in centimetres, the measurement number will change but the pentagon will remain the same.
Any 5 sided polygon is a pentagon. There is no formula for it. We have formulas for area and perimeter. Perhaps that is what you are asking?
The side of the Polygon's measurements multiplied by 5.
A triangle, a square, a rectangle, a pentagon are all polygons.
The perimeter is the sum of the sides of a polygon. So, to find the perimeter of a pentagon, you need only to add up the 5 side lengths. In the event the pentagon is regular (all equal sides and angles) then you can multiply the measure of the side by 5 to get the perimeter.
possibly an irregular pentagon.
Irregular Pentagon
no, because a polygon with four right angles is a rectangle