A degree is usually a division of a measure between two fixed points. Sometimes, as in the case of temperature scales, it is between two arbitrary points. In others, such as angular displacement, it is a subdivision of a turn.
There are 540 degrees in a five sided figure.
There are 900 degrees in a seven sided figure!!
Rotating a figure 270 degrees is like rotating the figure to the left 90 degrees. I am not sure what formula or rule you use. *Joe Jonas Rocks*
360 degrees
1,800 degrees.
360 degrees
540 degrees.
270 degrees is 3/4 of the way around the circle. Ir is the same as rotating it 90 degrees (1/4) of the way clockwise. Turn it so anything that was pointing straight up would be pointing to the right.
No. The sum of the interior angles of any figure is [ 180 degrees x (2 less than the number of sides) ]. Any triangle . . . 180 degrees Any 4-sided figure, including a rhombus . . . 360 degrees Any 5-sided figure . . . 540 degrees Any 6-sided figure . . . 720 degrees . . . etc.
There are 360 degrees at the centre of any figure.
There is no such figure as a 20 degrees polygon.
120 degrees The way to figure any polygon is to draw diagonals from one of the vertexes to all the others and count the triangles. A 6 sided figure has 4 triangles. 4 times 180 = 720 total degrees. Divide that by 6 and you have 120.