No, only triangles do.
34 degrees Celsius is equal to 93.2 degrees Fahrenheit, so it is not cold at all.
(-18) degrees Celsius = (-0.4) degrees Fahrenheit.Formula: [°F] = [°C] × 1.8 + 32
-328 degrees Fahrenheit
Not hot at all - it is extremely cold: -457.87 F
To calculate from Celsius to Fahrenheit, 1. Multiply by 9 100 * 9 = 900 2. Divide by 5 900 / 5 = 180 3. Add 32 180 + 32 = 212 So, 100ºC = 212F.
180 degrees... all triangles equal 180.
The interior angles of a triangle must lie within the range (0, 180) degrees. For all other polygons, the interior angles must be in the range (0, 360) excluding 180 degrees.
360 degrees. All four-edged polygons (including parrallelogramz) have the equal interior sum of 360 degrees.
There are several types of polygons, including regular polygons, which have equal sides and angles, such as a square or equilateral triangle. There are also irregular polygons, which have different side lengths and angles, such as a rectangle or pentagon. Finally, there are convex polygons, where all interior angles are less than 180 degrees, and concave polygons, where at least one interior angle is greater than 180 degrees.
180 degrees, for all 3-sided polygons and triangles
The exterior angles of any polygon add up to 360 degrees
All polygons have an interior angle sum of 180(n-2) degrees where n is the number of sides. 180(9-2)=180*7=1260 degrees
That is the angle sum of all three angles. This is a pattern in all polygons. Every time you add a side to a polygon, it's angle sum adds by "180". Since a two sided polygon is not possible, the tree sided triangle starts with 180 degrees. For example, an equilateral triangle will always have 60 degrees as the degrees for one edge, because 60 times 3 will equal 180. Quadrilaterals will have 360 degrees as an angle sum, and so on.
All polygons with four angles (quadrilaterals) have a inner angle sum of 360 degrees.
all sides must be equal in length and each interior angle must be equal in degrees 90 or 180 or less than 90 degrees and 180 degrees
Yes the 3 interior angles of any triangle add up to 180 degrees
A concave polygon is a polygon with at least one interior angle greater than 180 degrees. This causes the polygon to have at least one "dent" or indentation in its shape. The presence of these interior angles greater than 180 degrees distinguishes concave polygons from convex polygons, which have all interior angles less than 180 degrees.