pentagon

listen to the pronunciation of pentagon
الإنجليزية - التركية
i., geom. beşgen
beşgen

Bir beşgen prizmanın kaç köşesi ve yüzeyi vardır? - How many vertices and faces does a pentagonal prism have?

{i} Pentagon
{i} Amerika savunma bakanlığı
beş köşe
(Geometri) muhammes
the Pentagon
Milli Savunma Bakanlığı binası
the Pentagon
Milli Savunma Bakanlığı
regular pentagon
düzgün beşgen
الإنجليزية - الإنجليزية
the headquarters of the United States of America's Department of Defense
A polygon with five sides and five angles
a figure, especially, with five angles and five sides
{n} an instrument to copy or reduce the size of a plan, print
The Pentagon is the main building of the US Defense Department, in Washington. The US Defense Department is often referred to as the Pentagon. a news conference at the Pentagon. A pentagon is a shape with five sides. the Pentagon the building in Washington DC from which the army, navy etc of the US are controlled, or the military officers who work in this building. a flat shape with five sides and five angles. Huge five-sided building (1941-43) in Arlington, Va. , that is the headquarters of the U.S. Department of Defense. Designed by George Edwin Bergstrom, it was, on its completion, the world's largest office building, covering 34 acres (14 hectares) and offering 3.7 million sq ft (about 344,000 sq m) of usable floor space for as many as 25,000 workers. Built of structural steel and reinforced concrete with some limestone facing at a cost of $83 million, the five-story structure actually consists of five concentric pentagons, with 10 spokelike corridors connecting the whole. In 2001 more than 180 people were killed and many more were injured when part of the Pentagon's southwest side was destroyed in the September 11 attacks
the headquarters of the United States of Americas Department of Defense
{i} five-sided building that is located in Washington D.C. (USA) and serves as United States Department of Defense headquarters
A polygon with 5 sides and 5 angles
A polygon having five angles and five sides Each angle is 108 degrees
A polygon with five sides The angles in a pentagon add up to be 540°
A plane figure with five sides and angles
A five-sided polygon (Lesson 2 5)
a government building with five sides that serves as the headquarters of the United States Department of Defense the United States military establishment a five-sided polygon
– A five sided polygon
A pentagon is a 5-sided figure: The United States Military Headquarters building (below) is a pentagon
a five sided shape
Five sided office building in Arlington, Virginia which houses the headquarters of the Department of Defense of the United States
A plane figure having five angles, and, consequently, five sides; any figure having five angles
Headquarters of the U S Department of Defense The five-sided building was completed in 1943 American Airlines Flight 77 crashed into the Pentagon September 11, 2001 killing 189
A five sided polygon Regular pentagons have five equal sides and five equal angles
the United States military establishment
a five-sided polygon
{i} five sided geometric shape
five sided polygon
A 5-sided polygon
a government building with five sides that serves as the headquarters of the United States Department of Defense
Plane figure with five straight sides In a regular pentagon, one with all five sides and angles equal, the angles are all 108° A regular pentagon can be superimposed on itself after rotation through 72° (2/5 radians)
Pentagon Papers
secret government documents that discussed the US's military involvement in Vietnam during the 1960s. These papers were taken from the Pentagon and printed in the New York Times in 1971. President Nixon tried to prevent the papers being printed, but the US Supreme Court said that the newspaper had a right to print them, because of the First Amendment. The court case examined the government's right to keep important information secret, and showed that the public has the right to know what its government is doing. Secret documents detailing the U.S. role in Indochina from World War II to 1968. The U.S. Defense Department commissioned the study; a project associate, Daniel Ellsberg, who was opposed to U.S. participation in the Vietnam War, leaked details of the documents to the press. In June 1971 The New York Times began publishing articles based on the study. The U.S. Justice Department, citing national security, obtained a temporary court order halting publication. The U.S. Supreme Court ruled that the government had failed to justify restraint of publication, and the documents were published widely, fueling debate over the country's Vietnam policy
Pentagon Papers
secret U.S. government documents detailing alleged acts of deception by U.S. government officials with regard to U.S. military activity in Southeast Asia
pentagon gang
a Filipino terrorist group that broke away from the Moro Islamic Liberation Front in 2001 in order to continue terrorism and kidnapping and extortion
A pentagon
pentangle
pentagons
plural of pentagon
regular pentagon
five-sided figure in which all sides and angles are equal
التركية - الإنجليزية
Pentagon
pentagon

    الواصلة

    Pen·ta·gon

    التركية النطق

    pentîgän

    النطق

    /ˈpentəˌgän/ /ˈpɛntɪˌɡɑːn/

    علم أصول الكلمات

    [ 'pen-t&-"gän ] (noun.) 1571. From French pentagone or late Latin pentagonum, from Greek πεντάγωνον, noun use of the neuter of the adjective πεντάγωνος ‘five-angled’, from πέντε ‘five’ + -γωνος ‘angled’.
المفضلات