The word "hexagon" comes from Greek, with "hexa" meaning "six" and "gonia" meaning "angle." It refers to a polygon with six sides and six angles.
The word "triangle" comes from the Latin word "triangulum," which is a combination of "tri-" meaning three, and "angulus" meaning angle. This reflects the geometric shape of a triangle having three angles.
The language of origin of "hexagon" is Greek. It comes from the combination of the Greek words "hex" meaning "six" and "gonia" meaning "angle," describing a shape with six angles or sides.
The Greek root "cant" comes from the Greek word "kanthos," meaning "corner" or "angle." It is often used in English to refer to a geometric angle or corner, as well as in words related to singing or chanting.
A word that has the same meaning as another word is a synonym.
what is angle by sector
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Triangles are based on the prefix 'tri', meaning three, and the root word 'angle', so the meaning is plain: 'tri-angle' means three angles, which is what a triangle is (a shape with three angles).
It is the angle that is inside the shape.
Greek: "poly-" from polus, meaning many. "gon" from gonia, meaning angle. Hence, many angles and implicitly many sides.
I suggest you give some thought to the meaning and derivation of the word "TRI-angle" Three
The Greek word for angle is "γωνία"
The greek word for angle is "γωνία" (ghoneea).
An obtuse angle is an angle of more than 180 degrees.
The word "angle" has two syllables.
-- an angle that measures 90 degrees -- an angle whose sides are mutually perpendicular
Another word for angle in writing is slant or bias.