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give me an example of a value in a math problem
Divide the number of sides into 360 degrees and then subtract your answer from 180 degrees to give you the interior angle. For example a regular hexagon has 6 equal sides and 360 divided by 6 = 60 degrees (the exterior angle) 180 - 60 = 120 degrees (the interior angle)
No. In each language there is an order in which adjectives are placed. You cannot say, for example "red big two squares" but rather "two big red squares." (see the related question below)
properties of addition with example
To find the number of degrees in 260 intervals, you need to know the size of each interval. For example, if each interval is 1 degree, then 260 intervals would equal 260 degrees. If each interval is 10 degrees, then it would equal 2,600 degrees. Therefore, the total degrees depend on the size of the interval you're considering.
In lines 2 and 5 of a diamante poem, two adjectives describe each contrasting idea. For example, in a diamante comparing day and night, the second and fifth lines would each have two adjectives describing day and night, respectively.
give five example each of human acts
give me an example of a value in a math problem
give example of common classification
yes
degrees
It depends on the specific adjectives and their relationship. If the adjectives are coordinate adjectives (equal in importance), they should be separated by a comma. If they are cumulative adjectives (one describes the other), no comma is needed.
Divide the number of sides into 360 degrees and then subtract your answer from 180 degrees to give you the interior angle. For example a regular hexagon has 6 equal sides and 360 divided by 6 = 60 degrees (the exterior angle) 180 - 60 = 120 degrees (the interior angle)
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patricia
No. In each language there is an order in which adjectives are placed. You cannot say, for example "red big two squares" but rather "two big red squares." (see the related question below)
A fraction of 360 degrees