yep,bought it last week.
Yes. It is still made by Procter and Gamble. It sells for about $2.99 for three bars.
Octagon soap is an eight-sided bar of soap which is how it got its name of octagon it has many uses such as: poison ivy treatment, house hold cleaner, catfish bait, and much more. this bar of soap was commonly used in a Southern house hold for things like to loosen dirt form working men's' overalls and to lather hands that have come in contact with poison ivy some people use octagon soap to bathe themselves and in doing so the skin can become tough and hard to pierce
It still has 8 sides the same as a regular octagon.
An octagon is an eight-sided two-dimensional object. If each of the eight sides to an octagon were concave, it would still be an octagon. So, yes, it could.
An Octagon House is a house that is built with its outer walls making the shape of an octagon, usually a regular octagon. This style was popular in the US and Canada in the 1850s, and there are still many octagon houses in existence. Several of them are called The Octagon House, so there is no single answer to the question.
On the box, it says that you can use it for Acne. So to answer your question, Yes!
glycerol..
2,957
Not necessarily. If all sides are the same size, and all angles are also the same, then it is called a "regular octagon". But an irregular octagon is still an octagon - the only requirement is that it have 8 sides.
It's produced by ABC in NYC.
An octagon cannot tessellate because when you put about 4 together, there are gaps in between the shapes, which is not allowed in a tessellation. When you put together 5 octagon's, some of them are overlapping and there still are gaps. Therefore, an octagon cant tessellate.