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词汇 hexagon
释义

Definition of hexagon in English:

hexagon

noun ˈhɛksəɡ(ə)nˈhɛksəˌɡɑn
  • A plane figure with six straight sides and angles.

    六边形,六角形

    Example sentencesExamples
    • They are formed from 60 atoms of carbon bonded together in a combination of pentagons and hexagons to form a ball, just like a soccer ball.
    • On the east side of the hexagon, opposite the entrance from the sea, there is a large porticoed square with its west side open to the harbour, and containing a central structure - possibly a temple.
    • The design radiates symmetrically from a central point and is constructed from a pattern of circles, equilateral triangles, squares, hexagons and/or six-pointed stars.
    • The bee's honeycombs, pristine hexagons, are symmetrical over several axes.
    • It is composed of pentagons and hexagons of carbon atoms arranged in a sphere, just like a football (or soccer ball for US readers).
    • The first day of school, she told me that I must be pretty stupid if I didn't know a hexagon had six sides.
    • In the other case, the sides of the hexagon are parallel to the sides of the given triangle.
    • The diamond core remains intact, but the surface breaks into carbon hexagons and pentagons, effectively encasing the diamond in a shell similar to a buckyball, which is also called a fullerene.
    • Triangles, squares and hexagons create their own proportions and systems.
    • Secondly, simple, geometric plans such as squares, triangles, and hexagons are common to the most dramatic of these examples.
    • Resembling the shape of a football, Fullerene contains 60 carbon molecules in hexagons and pentagons.
    • You might define a more-general class polygon, which would have triangle as a subclass, along with other subclasses such as quadrilateral, pentagon and hexagon.
    • They come in two shapes, either a square or a hexagon.
    • For example, 10 carbon atoms can be arranged into two conjoined hexagons, each hexagon sharing two carbon atoms with the other.
    • Perfect crystal structures can contain pyramids, cubes, or hexagons, but not pentagons.
    • This time the board is made up of hexagons (instead of squares) and up to four may play.
    • The hexagons, pentagons, and triangles that make up the biomes all have their own unique specification due to the irregular nature of the site.
    • Carbon atoms are linked into hexagons, and the hexagonal pattern makes up the walls of a cylinder only nanometers wide.
    • This requires that their underlying lattices be based on triangles, parallelograms, or hexagons.
    • For those who don't know, a buckyball is an extremely stable soccer-ball-shaped molecule made up of 20 hexagons and 12 pentagons.

Origin

Late 16th century: via late Latin from Greek hexagōnon, neuter (used as a noun) of hexagōnos 'six-angled'.

  • six from Middle English:

    The number six is Old English, but comes from the same ancient root as Latin sex and Greek hexa ‘six’. These gave us sextet (mid 19th century), sextuple (mid 16th century), hexagon (late 16th century), and similar words (compare seven). In cricket a six is a hit that sends the ball clear over to the boundary without first striking the ground, scoring six runs. The ball needs to be struck hard to go that far, and this is the image behind the expression to knock for six, ‘to utterly surprise or overcome’, recorded from the beginning of the 20th century. A form of the phrase also occurs as to hit for six, which tends to have the slightly different meaning of ‘to affect very severely’. The origins of at sixes and sevens, ‘in a state of total confusion and disarray’, lie in gambling with dice. The phrase first occurs in Geoffrey Chaucer's poem Troilus and Criseyde, in the version to set on six and seven. It is most likely that the phrase was an alteration of the Old French words for five and six, cinque and sice, these being the highest numbers on a dice. The ‘inflation’ of the numbers probably came about either because people who did not know French misheard the words, or as a jokey exaggeration. The idea was that betting on the possibility of these two numbers coming up was the height of recklessness, and could result in your whole world falling apart. A man's six-pack is his toned midriff—the abdominal muscle is crossed by three bands of fibre which look like a set of six separate muscles if the person is slim and fit. The original six-pack is associated more with couch-potatoes, as it is a pack of six cans of beer held together with a plastic fastener.

Definition of hexagon in US English:

hexagon

nounˈheksəˌɡänˈhɛksəˌɡɑn
  • A plane figure with six straight sides and angles.

    六边形,六角形

    Example sentencesExamples
    • They are formed from 60 atoms of carbon bonded together in a combination of pentagons and hexagons to form a ball, just like a soccer ball.
    • This time the board is made up of hexagons (instead of squares) and up to four may play.
    • The bee's honeycombs, pristine hexagons, are symmetrical over several axes.
    • The first day of school, she told me that I must be pretty stupid if I didn't know a hexagon had six sides.
    • It is composed of pentagons and hexagons of carbon atoms arranged in a sphere, just like a football (or soccer ball for US readers).
    • For those who don't know, a buckyball is an extremely stable soccer-ball-shaped molecule made up of 20 hexagons and 12 pentagons.
    • Carbon atoms are linked into hexagons, and the hexagonal pattern makes up the walls of a cylinder only nanometers wide.
    • On the east side of the hexagon, opposite the entrance from the sea, there is a large porticoed square with its west side open to the harbour, and containing a central structure - possibly a temple.
    • Perfect crystal structures can contain pyramids, cubes, or hexagons, but not pentagons.
    • The design radiates symmetrically from a central point and is constructed from a pattern of circles, equilateral triangles, squares, hexagons and/or six-pointed stars.
    • Triangles, squares and hexagons create their own proportions and systems.
    • The diamond core remains intact, but the surface breaks into carbon hexagons and pentagons, effectively encasing the diamond in a shell similar to a buckyball, which is also called a fullerene.
    • This requires that their underlying lattices be based on triangles, parallelograms, or hexagons.
    • In the other case, the sides of the hexagon are parallel to the sides of the given triangle.
    • They come in two shapes, either a square or a hexagon.
    • Secondly, simple, geometric plans such as squares, triangles, and hexagons are common to the most dramatic of these examples.
    • The hexagons, pentagons, and triangles that make up the biomes all have their own unique specification due to the irregular nature of the site.
    • You might define a more-general class polygon, which would have triangle as a subclass, along with other subclasses such as quadrilateral, pentagon and hexagon.
    • Resembling the shape of a football, Fullerene contains 60 carbon molecules in hexagons and pentagons.
    • For example, 10 carbon atoms can be arranged into two conjoined hexagons, each hexagon sharing two carbon atoms with the other.

Origin

Late 16th century: via late Latin from Greek hexagōnon, neuter (used as a noun) of hexagōnos ‘six-angled’.

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