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circlePerfectly round shape, the path of a point that moves so as to keep a constant distance from a fixed point (the centre). A circle has a radius (the distance from any point on the circle to the centre), a circumference (the boundary of the circle, part of which is called an arc), diameters (straight lines crossing the circle through the centre), chords (lines joining two points on the circumference), tangents (lines that touch the circumference at one point only), sectors (regions inside the circle between two radii), and segments (regions between a chord and the circumference). The ratio of the distance all around the circle (the circumference) to the diameter is an irrational number called π (pi), roughly equal to 3.1416. A circle of radius r and diameter d has a circumference C = πd, or C = 2πr, and an area A = πr2. The area of a circle can be shown by dividing it into very thin sectors and reassembling them to make an approximate rectangle. The proof of A = πr2 can be done only by using integral calculus. Angles within a circle can be calculated using the circle theorems.
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| But what's happening politically is they've circled the wagons and are running this as if it's their school system and not the public's school system. On the other hand, conservatives circled the wagons around Rick Santorum after his bigoted comments about homosexuality. Rumsfeld declined to take my advice as Religious Right leaders circled the wagons around Boykin's "free speech" rights as if they were suddenly the world's greatest civil libertarians. |
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