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sides

Sides is the plural of side and is used across mathematics, language, cuisine, and everyday discourse.

In geometry, a side is a straight line segment that forms part of the boundary of a

Outside pure geometry, sides can refer to surfaces of objects or to opposing camps in a debate.

In culinary usage, sides or side dishes are foods served with the main course, such as fries,

In sports and team contexts, a side can denote a team or squad competing in a match.

polygon.
Each
side
connects
two
vertices.
A
polygon
with
n
sides
is
called
an
n-gon
(triangle
=
3-gon,
quadrilateral
=
4-gon,
etc.).
The
perimeter
of
a
polygon
is
the
sum
of
its
side
lengths.
In
triangles,
the
side
lengths
determine
the
shape,
and
the
triangle
inequality
states
that
the
sum
of
the
lengths
of
any
two
sides
must
exceed
the
length
of
the
third.
A
polygon
is
regular
if
all
its
sides
(and
all
its
angles)
are
equal.
In
three-dimensional
figures,
the
surfaces
are
called
faces;
the
term
side
is
sometimes
used
informally
to
refer
to
faces,
though
this
is
less
precise.
The
phrase
“sides
of
an
issue”
points
to
different
viewpoints,
and
to
“take
sides”
means
to
align
with
a
group
or
position.
Phrases
like
“on
both
sides
of
the
aisle”
describe
bipartisan
or
dual-position
contexts.
rice,
vegetables,
or
salads.
The
term
helps
distinguish
accompanying
dishes
from
the
main
entrée.
The
word’s
meaning
is
shaped
by
context,
ranging
from
geometry
to
rhetoric
to
daily
life.