Well from what your question says, it seems that you are thinking of a constellation.
These include orion's belt and the two bears.
Groups of tissue that work together are called organs. Organs are made up of different types of tissues that collaborate to perform specific functions in the body.
Groups in the periodic table are made of columns that go up and down and are called groups or families. Each group/family has elements that share similar chemical properties because they have the same number of electrons in their outermost energy level.
Group 18, also called the noble gases, contains the elements that are nonreactive.
The DNA backbone, are made of alternating sugars and phosphate groups.
Triglycerides are essentially made of glycerol (propan-tri-ol = CH2OH-CHOH-CH2OH) with three (tri) acid groups bound on the 3 hydroxyl groups: formed by ester bonds. If these acid groups come from three fatty acids (CH3-(CH2)n-COOH with n is even number) these groups are called -acyl groups (-COOH). So that's why it is called triACYLglycerol or triacylglycerides. However if another acid is ester-bound to glycerol it is called after that (kind of) acid: by example with nitric acid ( HO-N(=O)2 ) the ester name is triNITROglycerol better known as nitroglycerine, a heavy, colorless, oily, explosive liquid (1860, by Alfred Nobel)
It is called a Constellation good question
Shapes
a polygon
It is a Polygon.Polygon
Yes.
The legislative branch of the US government is made up of two groups called houses. These houses are the Senate and the House of Representatives.
They are called polygons
No. Weeping Angels are statues made from stone. Action figures are plastic. If action figures were an enemy in Doctor Who, they would be the Auton. Because the Auton are plastic people who are controlled by an entity called the Nestene Consciousness.
It is a three dimensional figure of some sort.
McFarlane Figures made it's name creating figures based on movie, cartoon and video games. It has created figures from The Simpsons, Where The Wild Things Are and innumerable baseball and basketball stars.
Depends on what figures are "from brackets".
traingle* * * * *Not quite. A triangle (even) is one example, but the general answer is a polygon.