The sides of a fish tank look like a mirror when observed from specific angles because of glass refraction. When the light is reflected off of the glass at certain angles, it looks mirror like.
A right angled triangle has three sides. The naming of these sides is dependant on which angle you are observing. The first side is named the opposite and is the side which is not in contact with the angle that is being observed (each angle is in contact with ONLY two sides) The second side is the hypotenuse which is the side opposite to the right angle. Also termed the diagonal, the hypotenuse is the longest side of the triangle. The third side, the one you are interested in, is the adjacent side which is the angle which is in contact with the angle being observed which ISN'T the hypotenuse or the opposite. It can be determined by a process of elimination in that there are two sides in contact with the observed angle.
The point that is equidistant from the sides of an angle is called the angle bisector. This line divides the angle into two equal parts and is the locus of points that are equidistant from both sides. The intersection of the angle bisector with the interior of the angle is the specific point you are referring to.
Given the reference perspective of a specific angle the sides are are the adjacent sides and the opposite side If we have a right triangle the longest side (opposite the right angle) is the hypotenuse.
No angle has 10 sides. An angle has two sides.
An angle must have 2 sides or it is no longer an angle.
None. An angle has 2 sides.
A 120-degree angle is associated with a polygon that has 3 sides, specifically a triangle, when considering interior angles. However, if you're asking how many sides a regular polygon can have with each interior angle measuring 120 degrees, the answer is a hexagon, which has 6 sides. In this context, the angle itself does not define a specific number of sides, but rather the polygon formed by such angles.
the intesection of the two sides of an angle is the angle 's?
two rays make up an angle, so the rays are the sides of the angle.
They are the sides of an angle.
point of intersection of the sides of the angle; the vertex
The length of the sides has nothing to do with the measure of the angle.