Enneagram (geometry) (original) (raw)

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Nine-pointed star polygon

"Nonagram" redirects here. For the puzzle, see Nonogram.

Enneagram
Enneagrams shown as sequential stellations
Edges and vertices 9
Symmetry group Dihedral (D9)
Internal angle (degrees) 100° {9/2}20° {9/4}

In geometry, an enneagram (🟙 U+1F7D9) is a nine-pointed plane figure. It is sometimes called a nonagram, nonangle, or enneagon.[1]

The word 'enneagram' combines the numeral prefix ennea- with the Greek suffix -gram. The gram suffix derives from γραμμῆ (grammē) meaning a line.[2]

A regular enneagram is a 9-sided star polygon. It is constructed using the same points as the regular enneagon, but the points are connected in fixed steps. Two forms of regular enneagram exist:

There is also a star figure, {9/3} or 3{3}, made from the regular enneagon points but connected as a compound of three equilateral triangles.[3][4] (If the triangles are alternately interlaced, this results in a Brunnian link.) This star figure is sometimes known as the star of Goliath, after {6/2} or 2{3}, the star of David.[5]

Compound Regular star Regularcompound Regular star
Complete graph K9 {9/2} {9/3} or 3{3} {9/4}

Other enneagram figures

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The nine-pointed star or enneagram can also symbolize the nine gifts or fruits of the Holy Spirit.[6]

  1. ^ "Between a square rock and a hard pentagon: Fractional polygons". 28 September 2017.
  2. ^ γραμμή, Henry George Liddell, Robert Scott, A Greek-English Lexicon, on Perseus.
  3. ^ Grünbaum, B. and G. C. Shephard; Tilings and patterns, New York: W. H. Freeman & Co., (1987), ISBN 0-7167-1193-1.
  4. ^ Grünbaum, B.; Polyhedra with Hollow Faces, Proc of NATO-ASI Conference on Polytopes ... etc. (Toronto 1993), ed T. Bisztriczky et al., Kluwer Academic (1994) pp. 43-70.
  5. ^ Weisstein, Eric W. "Nonagram". mathworld.wolfram.com.
  6. ^ Our Christian Symbols by Friedrich Rest (1954), ISBN 0-8298-0099-9, page 13.
  7. ^ "slipknot". eBay.

Bibliography