polygon

listen to the pronunciation of polygon
İngilizce - İngilizce
Such a figure and its interior, taken as a whole
A plane figure bounded by straight edges
The boundary of such a figure
A figure comprising vertices and (not necessarily straight) edges, alternatingly
a figure having many angles
{n} a figure having many angles or sides
a closed plane figure bounded by straight lines
A multisided figure that represents area on a map A feature defined by the arcs that make up its boundary Every polygon contains one label point within its boundary Polygons have attributes that describe the geographic feature they represent
a closed plane figure bounded by straight sides
An N-sided planar surface with a finite area A convex polygon has no interior angles greater than 180 degrees
Thematically homogenous areas composed of one or more faces
A closed plane figure formed by three or more line segments that do not cross over each other (cf What Are Tessellations Discussion)
A two-dimensional figure with three or more sides Polygons represent features too large to be depicted as points or lines Polygons have length (perimeter) as well as an area
A closed plane figure with straight sides
one whose perimeter consists of more than four sides; any figure having many angles
A polygon is a closed convex geometric figure with three of more sides A regular polygon is one with equal sides and equal interior angles Some special polygons: triangle: a polygon of three sides quadrilateral: a polygon of four sides pentagon: a polygon of five sides hexagon: a polygon of six sides heptagon: a polygon of seven sides octagon: a polygon of eight sides nonagon: a polygon of nine sides decagon: a polygon of ten sides n-gon: a polygon of n sides
A plane figure bounded by a number of straight lines In a regular polygon, all the sides are equal and all the internal angles are equal
A closed curve formed only by line segments that meet at their endpoints (called vertices) See also: simple closed curve
A feature used to represent areas A polygon is defined by the lines that make up its boundary and a point inside its boundary for identification Polygons have attributes that describe the geographic feature they represent
An area bordered by three or more straight edges, with a vertex in every corner Parts of the polygon are
A closed figure formed by three or more line segments that do not intersect other than at the vertices
A closed plane figure See simple polygon
Line segments joined together to form a closed figure Rectangles, squares, pentagons are all examples of polygons
2 dimensional vector object (i e , has area) Polygons are defined by a set of arcs with a common topology
A polygon is a flat, or plane closed figure made up of at least 3 lines Triangles, rectangles, octagons, and all other flat figures that have 3 or more sides are polygons Here is a dodecagon: (a polygon with 12 sides!)
a closed geometric entity used to graphically represent area features with associated attributes
a flat shape with three or more sides. In geometry, any closed curve consisting of a set of line segments (sides) connected such that no two segments cross. The simplest polygons are triangles (three sides), quadrilaterals (four sides), and pentagons (five sides). If none of the sides, when extended, intersects the polygon, it is a convex polygon; otherwise it is concave. A polygon with all sides equal is equilateral. One with all interior angles equal is equiangular. Any polygon that is both equilateral and equiangular is a regular polygon (e.g., equilateral triangle, square)
closed broken line in a plane The line segments are called sides and their end points are the vertices
1 A feature used to represent areas A polygon is defined by the lines that make up its boundary and a point inside its boundary for identification Polygons have attributes that describe the geographic feature they represent 2 An ARC/INFO coverage feature class used to represent areas Polygon attributes, stored in a polygon attribute table (PAT), describe the geographic feature they represent
(n ) A planar shape created by a set of connected line segments (or vectors) that form vertexes at their meeting points Note that an n-gon is a polygon with an undetermined number of sides
A polygon is a closed figure with more than two sides
Two-dimensional closed shape, bounded by line segments, typically with exactly two line segments, or sides, meeting at each vertex The faces of polyhedra are polygons
A coverage feature class used to represent areas A polygon is defined by the arcs that make up its boundary and a point inside its boundary for identification Polygons have attributes (PAT) that describe the geographic feature they represent
A closed figure with three of more straight sides
A plane figure having many angles, and consequently many sides; esp
{i} figure with three or more sides, type of geometric figure
polyangle
polygonial
polygon mesh
A collection of vertices, edges and faces that defines the shape of a polyhedral object
polygon meshes
plural form of polygon mesh
polygon of forces
A polygonal figure the sides of which are vectors representing several forces acting simultaneously upon one point, so that the vector necessary to make the figure closed is the resultant of those forces
polygonal
Having many angles; hence characteristic of a polygon
regular polygon
A polygon which is both equiangular and equilateral (i.e. having all sides the same length and all interior angles the same)
star polygon
a geometric figure formed by connecting, with straight lines, every qth point out of p regularly spaced points that lie on the circumference of a circle
polygonal
{a} containing many angles or sides
Polygonal
polygonous
concave polygon
a polygon such that there is a straight line that cuts it in four or more points
convex polygon
a polygon such that no side extended cuts any other side or vertex; it can be cut by a line in at most two points
frequency polygon
graph of a frequency distribution; scores are plotted on the X axis, and frequencies are plotted on the Y axis
frequency polygon
A graph that displays the frequency of scores by connecting points representing them above each score
frequency polygon
A graph of a frequency distribution with values of the variable on the x-axis and the number of observations on the y-axis; data points are plotted at the midpoints of the intervals and are connected with a straight line
polygonal
Having many angles
polygonal
having many sides or relating to a surface marked by polygons; "polygonal structure
polygonal
having many sides or relating to a surface marked by polygons; "polygonal structure"
polygonal
{s} shaped like a polygon, having three or more sides
polygonal
polygonial
polygonal
polygonic
polygonal
polygonar
polygonal
polygonate
polygonally
In a manner that forms polygons
polygonally
in a polygonal manner
polygonally
in the shape of a polygon, in the form of a polygon
polygonally
polygonically
polygons
regular polygon octagon vertex simple polygon nonagon diagonal pentagon decagon convex or concave hexagon dodecagon inscribed polygon heptagon n-gon perimeter
polygons
multisided plane figures of varying numbers of sides
polygons
Spatial features that are areas or zones enclosed by precisely defined boundaries The boundaries of a polygon are formed from one or more lines
polygons
plural of polygon
reentrant polygon
a polygon with one or more reentrant angles
regular polygon
multiple sided figure in which all sides and angles are equal
regular polygon
a polygon with all sides and all angles equal
spherical polygon
a figure on the surface of a sphere bounded by arcs of 3 or more great circles
spherical polygon
A part of a spherical surface that is bounded by arcs of three or more great circles
polygon

    Heceleme

    po·ly·gon

    Türkçe nasıl söylenir

    päligän

    Telaffuz

    /ˈpälēˌgän/ /ˈpɑːliːˌɡɑːn/

    Etimoloji

    [ 'pä-lE-"gän ] (noun.) 1571. Ancient Greek πολύγωνον (polygōnon) πολύς (polus, “many”) and γωνία (gōnia, “angle”).