Angles with Triangles and Polygons - Page 5
Questions
- How do you find the sum of the interior angle measures in 48-gon?
- Are all isosceles triangles equilateral?
- I am a polygon. I am a quadrangle. All of my sides are the same length. What am I?
- Each interior angle of a regular polygon is equal to 172 degrees. Determine the number of sides of the polygon. Explain?
- Is a rectangle a regular polygon?
- The congruent sides of an isosceles triangle are 13 cm. If its height is 12 cm, what is the length of the base of the isosceles triangle?
- How is the number of sides related to the sum of the interior angles in a polygon, and what about the sum of the exterior angles?
- How do you calculate the height of an equilateral triangle?
- How can an isosceles triangle have a right angle?
- Why can't two obtuse angles be supplementary?
- Is an isosceles triangle always, sometimes or never a right triangle?
- Does anyone know of a theorem or equation that will determine how many diagonals a polygon has, without having to do a drawing to see how many there are?
- How do you find the perimeter and area of an isosceles triangle whose base is 6cm, leg is 5cm and height is 4cm?
- What is the sum of the interior angle measures in a 20-gon?
- Which of the following best describes a regular polygon when the measure of each exterior angle is 36?
- A hexagon has five angles that measure 140° each. What is the measure of the sixth angle?
- Each exterior angle of a certain regular polygon measures 30. How many sides does the polygon have?
- How many sides do these regular Polygons have if their interior is 30?
- How do you calculate the perimeter of an isosceles triangle?
- How much degrees does a pentagon have?