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Art Math Jr.

Across
Tool used measure angles.
Repeat a process, again and again.
Lines/segments that lie in the same plane but never intersect.
Three-sided polygon
Six-sided Platonic solid also known as a cube. All faces are congruent squares.
Platonic solid that has twelve congruent regular pentagonal faces.
Tool used to draw arcs and circles.
A plane or "flat" figure which, when folded, creates a 3-D solid figure.
Lines/segments that intersect in such a way that they form 90 degree angles.
Having all congruent sides and all congruent angles.
A transformation in which a figure is turned about a fixed point.
The set of all points equidistant from a point usually referred to as the center.
Platonic Solid with twenty congruent equilateral triangular faces.
Term that describes a triangle with at least two sides congruent or a trapezoid with at least one pair of opposite sides congruent.
Down
Side of a polyhedron.
Platonic solid with four congruent equilateral triangular faces.
Cuts in half
Five-sided polygon.
Segment that has one endpoint at the center of a circle and the other endpoint on the circle.
Intersection of two faces of a solid figure.
Platonic solid with eight congruent equilateral triangular faces.
Having the same measure.
Nine-sided polygon
Eight-sided polygon
Geometric drawing made with a compass and straightedge.
Parallelogram with four right angles and four congruent sides.
Parallelogram with four right angles.
Segment that has both endpoints on a circle and passes through its center.
Figures that have corresponding angles that are congruent and corresponding sides that are proportional. Usually same shape but different sizes.
Point that divides a segment into two congruent segments.
Having all sides congruent (same length).
Last name of the mathematician credited with discovering the fractal "sponge" shape we created with cubes.
A never-ending pattern of infinitely complex patterns that are self-similar across different scales, created by repeating a simple process over and over again.
Six-sided polygon
An angle that measures exactly 90 degrees.