No, polygons are made of straight, non-overlapping sides. An ellipse has curves.
A real-life example of an ellipse is the path that some heavenly bodies travel in space. Earth's path around the sun is elliptical.Informally, a flattened circle. You can read the Wikipedia article for a more formal definition, as well as to investigate its different properties.
It is called a decagon.
that purely depends on the given polygon and any information about it
a polygon with 6 sides * * * * * The fact that is has six sides makes it a hexagon but that does not explain ""convex". A convex polygon is one in which none of the angles is a reflex angle. An alternative definition of convex is that a line joining any two points inside the hexagon is wholly inside the shape.
A hectagon (or hectogon) is a Polygon with 100 angles.A heptagon has 7, and a hexagon has 6.
No it cannot. A polygon is a plane space enclosed by straight lines. An ellipse consists of a curved line, not straight lines.
The answer is a kite because a kite has equal sides!
Any closed figure that is not entirely composed of straight sides, such as an ellipse or a circle.
No it is not. An "Ellispe" is not even a recognised word!. In any case, a polygon is a plane space enclosed by straight lines. An ellipse consists of a curved line, not straight lines.
A shape can have one side, as in a circle or an ellipse; and there are no limits to the maximum number of sides a polygon can have.
Triangle, quadrilateral, pentagon, hexagon, (or polygon, in general), circle, ellipse, are some names.
Any shape you like - a circle, ellipse, triangle, quadrilateral, polygon with n sides, irregular shapes.
There are many shapes: Any regular polygon. An irregular polygon with an even number of sides in which the opposite sides and angles are equal. An irregular polygon with 3n sides where every third side is equal and every third angle is equal. and so on. A circle, ellipse, disc, oval
A circle, semicircle, segments or sectors of circle, ellipse, segments or sectors of ellipses, cardiods, closed convex wriggly shapes.
No. Both foci are always inside the ellipse, otherwise you don't have an ellipse.
No. Both foci are always inside the ellipse, otherwise you don't have an ellipse.
Circle, ellipse, rectangle, square, parallelogram, rhombus, trapezoid, isosceles triangle, equilateral triangle, any regular polygon.