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Published byJesse Cain Modified over 8 years ago
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Polygon Pizza By MeeMee Van Driest
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For the first pizza, the shape was a rectangle quadrilateral. I put my square on the end of the rectangle pizza. Then, I made a line where the square stopped. Then, I knew that the 1st square made 1 square, which was $4.00. The other was the same, so I doubled $4.00 and got $8.00. Pizza number 1
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For this pizza, the shape was a triangle. So, I cut the triangle into 2 separate triangles. I then measured that the halves of the original triangle was half of the square. Since it was half of the square pizza which costed $4.00, I knew it was $2.00, because half of 4 is 2. So, I then knew the other half of the triangle would be $2.00 also, because it was the same size as the other triangle. So I added 2 plus 2 and got 4. So then I knew it was $4.00 altogether. Pizza number 2
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I put my square on the left side of the pentagon, and made a mark where it ended. I had 2 squares the same size. Since each square was the same size, I had 2 square pizzas that each equaled $4.00. I added those and got $8.00. Then, there was a triangle. I cut it in half using my square, and they were the same sizes. So, I measured 1 of the 2 triangles and saw it was half of the square I had. So, it was $2.00. Since the other half was the same size, I knew it was also $2.00. So, $2.00 plus $2.00 equals $4.00, plus $8.00 equals $12.00. The pentagon pizza equals $12.00. Pizza number 3
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