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Euler implicitly assumed his polyhedra were convex, meaning a line segment joining any two points stayed completely within the polyhedron.—quantamagazine.org, 26 Jan. 2021 Mold that box into a pyramid or tetrahedron or any other everyday polyhedron.—Devin Powell, Discover Magazine, 20 Mar. 2019 This polyhedron is a classic prism made from professional-grade optical crystal glass.—Popular Science, 23 Oct. 2019 The 20th-century mathematician Aleksandr Aleksandrov proved that for every two-dimensional polygon, there is one unique way of folding it to form a 3-D polyhedron.—Quanta Magazine, 5 Jan. 2017 And the circle packing proof tells you that there’s a polyhedron that has all its edges tangent to a sphere.—Quanta Magazine, 19 Mar. 2018 The printer cranks out up to 150 polyhedra each year – everything from models of protein crystallography to Mars' topography.—Stacey Smith Lang, WIRED, 1 Nov. 2001
Word History
Etymology
borrowed from Greek polýedron, from poly-poly- + -edron-hedron
Note:
The Greek word is attested in Euclid's Elementa, Book 12, Proposition 17.
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