Polygons are classified according to the number of sides they have. A polygon with n sides is called an n-gon. The following lists some of the names of polygons, depending on the number of sides. It is also possible to substitute “n-gon,” when the name is not known (for example 14-gon or 20-gon).
Sides |
Polygon Name |
3 |
trigon or triangle |
4 |
quadrilateral or tetragon |
5 |
pentagon |
6 |
hexagon |
7 |
heptagon |
8 |
octagon |
9 |
nonagon or enneagon |
10 |
decagon |
11 |
hendecagon or undecagon (even less frequently as unidecagon) |
12 |
dodecagon |
13 |
tridecagon or triskaidecagon |
14 |
tetradecagon or tetrakaidecagon |
15 |
pentadecagon or pentakaidecagon |
16 |
hexadecagon or hexakaidecagon |
17 |
heptadecagon or heptakaidecagon |
18 |
octadecagon or octakaidecagon |
19 |
enneadecagon or enneakaidecagon |
20 |
icosagon |
30 |
triacontagon |
40 |
tetracontagon |
50 |
pentacontagon |
60 |
hexacontagon |
70 |
heptacontagon |
80 |
octacontagon |
90 |
enneacontagon |
100 |
hectogon or hecatontagon |
1,000 |
chiliagon |
10,000 |
myriagon |
Some texts list a two-sided polygon as a “digon,” but this is only meant for theoretical mathematics. If you feel like making up your own name, try constructing some sided polygons. For example, a 46-sided polygon could be called a tetracontakai-hexagon, or a combination of “tetracon-tagon” + “kai” (often used in combining names) + “hexagon.” To shorten such long names, mathematicians often use “n-gon” to simplify matters; thus, 46 would be 46-gon a much easier name to remember and even say.
The parts of a polygon.