Yes, it means in the shape of a trapezoid. A trapezoid is a four-sided shape with two parallel sides.
The adjective form of triangle is triangular.
The trapezoidal pattern for evaluating an amplitude modulation (AM) envelope offers improved accuracy in representing the signal's waveform compared to simpler methods like rectangular integration. This approach accounts for variations in the signal more effectively by approximating the area under the curve with trapezoids, reducing errors that can occur with sharp transitions. As a result, it provides a better estimation of the envelope's characteristics, such as peak values and overall shape, which is crucial for effective demodulation in communication systems.
Yes, it is. It is the adjective form of the noun treachery, which can mean villainy, perfidy, or disloyalty. But treacherous can also mean fraught with danger (a treacherous section of the road).
The adverb form of the adjective 'tragic' is tragically.
No. Injured is a past tense verb and an adjective. Verb: Sarah injured her arm. Adjective: Sarah has an injured arm.
a trapezoidal prism
Yes, it is called a Trapezoidal or a Trapezoidal Prism.
Area of trapezoidal cross-section x length.
A trapezoidal prism has 8 vertices:A trapezoid has 4 vertices.A trapezoidal prism is composed of 2 trapezoids. 2 X 4 = 8.
You cannot have a trapezoidal cylinder. That is like a square circle - an impossible shape.
yes
A trapezoidal prism has two trapezoidal bases and four rectangular lateral faces. Each of these rectangles can be considered a parallelogram since they have opposite sides that are equal and parallel. Therefore, there are a total of six parallelograms in a trapezoidal prism: two from the bases and four from the lateral faces.
If you mean volume of a trapezoidal prism then it is: 0.5*(sum of parallel sides)*height*length
If it is a rectangular trapezoidal pedestal: Calculate the area of the base of the pedestal, multiply by the height of the pedestal. If the angles of the pedestal are not 90deg.. i.e. if it is a pyramidal trapezoidal pedestal. Then calculate the volume as you normally would a rectangular trapezoidal pedestal, and subtract the volume of the missing triangular pieces with the formula 1/3 area of base X height.
Yes.
An irregular hexahedron.
No clue... But I know who else knows the trapezoidal prism... MY MOM! Sorry, I had to say that... but seriously, MY MOM KNOWS! woop!