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We have to prove the statement:
If a regular icosahedron has three red vertices then it has a vertex that has at least two red neighbours.
We can use an argument by contradiction. We suppose that NO vertex has more than one red neighbour and reach a contradiction thus showing that this statement must be false
Without loss of generality you can think about the top vertex being red and decide what that means for the other vertices around it.
P is a point on the circumference of a circle radius r which rolls, without slipping, inside a circle of radius 2r. What is the locus of P?
The coke machine in college takes 50 pence pieces. It also takes a certain foreign coin of traditional design...
A and C are the opposite vertices of a square ABCD, and have coordinates (a,b) and (c,d), respectively. What are the coordinates of the vertices B and D? What is the area of the square?