Sign In
Ask Question
Mathematics
Aidan Chambers
7 July, 22:28
Real life examples of heptagons and pentagons?
+5
Answers (
1
)
Kendrick Davis
8 July, 00:16
0
The headquarters of the United States Department of Defense is in the shape of a Pentagon, hence its colloquial name, "the Pentagon." Heptagons are harder to find; the British fifty-pence coin is a heptagon, and some cookie tins and pill boxes and whatnot are heptagonal.
Comment
Complaint
Link
Know the Answer?
Answer
Not Sure About the Answer?
Get an answer to your question ✅
“Real life examples of heptagons and pentagons? ...”
in 📙 Mathematics if there is no answer or all answers are wrong, use a search bar and try to find the answer among similar questions.
Search for Other Answers
You Might be Interested in
Tua has created a new game called Making Green. To play the game, a player spins twice. If the player gets blue in one section and yellow in the other, the player wins, because blue and yellow together make green.
Answers (2)
The istance to the sun is 93000000 miles. A firefly is about 0.04 inches long. How many fireflies would it take to reach the sun if the were placed end to end?
Answers (1)
A businessman has 10 employees. His salary is equal to 6 times the average of employees salaries. If the 11 of them receive a total of $64,000 in one year, what was the business mans salary that year?
Answers (1)
4x^2=16 Completing the square
Answers (1)
Unleaded gasoline sells for 2.869 per gallon. How much would 10 one half gallons cost? Round your answer to the nearest cent.
Answers (1)
New Questions in Mathematics
5x=y So what does x equal?
Answers (1)
Estimate 234 dividend by 11
Answers (1)
A building 200 feet tall casts a 80 foot long shadow. If a person stands at the end of the shadow and looks up to the top of the building, what is the angle of the person's eyes to the top of the building (to the nearest hundredth of a degree) ?
Answers (1)
Find the area of the circle. round your answer to the nearest hundredths. the diameter is 2cm
Answers (1)
in a sample of 10 cards, 4 are red and 6 are blue. if 2 cards are selected at random from the sample, one at a time without replacement, what is the probability that both cards are not blue?
Answers (2)
Home
»
Mathematics
» Real life examples of heptagons and pentagons?
Sign In
Sign Up
Forgot Password?