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Capital letters with curves include letters like C, D, G, J, and S. These letters have rounded or circular elements in their shapes.
The answer is hexagon because if it is formed by curved, line segments, or both it is definitely hexagon!
These letters (when capital) are the ones drawn with only straight lines. The other letters (again, when capital) are drawn with curves.
A closed shape that is not a polygon made entirely of segments is a circle. Unlike polygons, which are composed of straight line segments, a circle is defined as the set of all points equidistant from a central point, and its boundary is smooth and curved. Other examples include ellipses and certain types of curves, such as ovals or closed curves like a figure-eight. These shapes do not have the straight edges characteristic of polygons.
A bell is a shape, but not a polygon. Polygons are constructed only from straight line segments, they do not contain curves (a circle is not a polygon either, unless you imagine it as being composed of infinitely many line segments, each of which is infinitely short).
Geometry is based on lines (line segments, chords) and angles (the intersection of line segments) and the mathematical relationships between them. It includes shapes formed by straight line segments (polygons) and by curves (circle, ellipse, parabola, hyperbola). In three dimensions, these relationships are extended to polyhedrons (3D shapes) and curved forms such as spheres and cylinders.
T (letters without curves)
It lacks straight line segments (sides) - it's a set of compound curves. Although - you *could* describe it as a *very large* set of *very short* straight lines.
Not one inch of the Parkwat is in Tennessee. It is all in North Carolina & Virginia.
Templates called French Cerves Simmiler to stensills ANSWER Here's a site that has an index of well known curves: http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Curves/Curves.html You will notice that a "straight line" is on the list. Although straight lines and line segments do not appear to be curved in the usual sense of the term, in the technical language of mathematics, they are treated as "curves." Associated trivia: Curves constitute the largest (or "strongest" infinity). For example, although the number of whole numbers is infinite, there are more variations of curves than there are whole numbers.
A polygon must be a closed region without any curves or arches. so you cant close one or two segments to form a polygon
Curves is monosyllabicPresumably no curves at all.3 curvesThoracic and sacral curves