It has 5 sides.
The sides are not equal.
It does not have right angles.
the pentagon is where the government lives =)
The word pentagon comes from the Greek word pentagon on
a pentagon has 5 sides, a regular pentagon has 5 EQUAL sides A Regular Pentagon is a shape that has equal angles and side lengths. It is type of Pentagon. Pentagons do not have to have equal sides and lengths.
The Pentagon is located in Arlington County, Virginia
The front of the pentagon
an irregular pentagon has five sides but the sides are not equal
It is a 5 sided shape with the properties that any line segment between two vertices of the pentagon remain in the boundaries of that pentagon. It generalizes to polygons.
A polygon with 5 sides all the same length.
No, a pentagon is not a kite. A pentagon is a five-sided polygon, while a kite is a specific type of quadrilateral that has two pairs of adjacent sides that are equal in length. Although both shapes belong to the broader category of geometric figures, they have distinct properties and classifications.
A special type of pentagon is called a "regular pentagon," which has all sides and angles equal. In geometry, a regular pentagon has interior angles of 108 degrees each. Additionally, there are other classifications based on specific properties, such as concave pentagons, which have at least one interior angle greater than 180 degrees.
No, a concave equilateral pentagon is not possible. In a concave polygon, at least one interior angle must be greater than 180 degrees, which would make it impossible for all sides to be of equal length while maintaining the necessary geometric properties of a pentagon. Thus, an equilateral pentagon must be convex.
The net of a pentagon is a two-dimensional representation that displays all the edges and vertices of the pentagon when it is unfolded. It consists of a single shape that shows all five sides and the interior angles, allowing for the visualization of how the pentagon would look when laid flat. In geometry, a net is useful for understanding the properties of the shape and for constructing three-dimensional forms.
A pentagon
A three-dimensional shape with a pentagon as its base is called a pentagonal prism. In a pentagonal prism, two parallel pentagonal faces are connected by five rectangular lateral faces. This shape retains the properties of a pentagon in its base while extending vertically into the third dimension.
The ninth pentagon refers to the ninth polygon in a sequence of pentagons, which are five-sided figures. In geometric terms, it can also refer to a specific pentagon that has been defined or labeled as the ninth in a particular context, such as in a sequence of construction or a mathematical problem involving pentagons. The properties of this pentagon, such as side length and angles, would depend on the criteria set for its formation.
It was named after a pentagon, it wasn't the 'Pentagon' that named the 'pentagon'.
Hexagon * * * * * A pentagon