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Answer for the clue "A four-sided polygon ", 13 letters:
quadrilateral

Alternative clues for the word quadrilateral

Word definitions for quadrilateral in dictionaries

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
"four-sided," 1640s, with -al (1) + Latin quadrilaterus , from quadri- "four" (see quadri- ) + latus (genitive lateris ) "side" (see oblate (n.)). As an adjective from 1650s. Related: Quadrilaterally .

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
noun EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS ▪ For emotional resonance, flags are about as potent as a quadrilateral of cloth can be. ▪ The cluster is made up of a small quadrilateral which is distinctive enough, and is very characteristic with × 20. ▪ The cyclic quadrilateral ...

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
A quadrilateral , in geometry, is a polygon with 4 sides. Quadrilateral may also refer to: Complete quadrilateral , in projective geometry, a configuration with 4 lines and 6 points Chicago-Lambeth Quadrilateral , a four-point statement of fundamental doctrine, ...

The Collaborative International Dictionary Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Quadrilateral \Quad`ri*lat"er*al\, a. [L. quadrilaterus: cf. F. quadrilat[`e]re, quadrilat['e]ral. See Quadri- and Lateral .] Having four sides, and consequently four angles; quadrangular.

WordNet Word definitions in WordNet
adj. having four sides [syn: four-sided ] n. a four-sided polygon [syn: quadrangle , tetragon ]

Usage examples of quadrilateral.

If a campus was a green quadrilateral described by hulking, hederated Gothics, then this was a campus.

The broadest part of Moor Fields, directly before Bedlam, had been outlined with a quadrilateral, and striped with a St.

It was a quadrilateral of the kind the Greeks termed a trapezium, having no side parallel to any other.

The square proved not to be a square, more a deformed cyclic quadrilateral, but it implied all the necessary elements of a public urban space.

Every scrap of land in the town was owned by the Church, and the Holy Surveyors of Rome had (or so Jack phant’sied) come out here and planted Trinitarian transits on the land that had been miraculously reclaimed from Lake Texcoco and hung holy plumb-bobs made of saints’ skulls and stretched cords of spun angels’ hair, driven crucifixes into the ground at strategickal Vertices, and platted the land into quadrilaterals, each one butted snugly against the next.

There were arcs, circles, quadrilaterals of annihilation, growing always, that sank downwards through the basic stone.