Trigonometry is used in design of everything from buildings to instruments to appliances. It is also used in electronics, acoustics, EM radiation, flight, navigation, projectile motion, and nearly every every application of waves and forces in physics and engineering.
Depending on your career, you may or may not need trigonometry. If your job does not require a lot of math, it is unlikely that you will use trigonometry very often, however, this is not a reason not to study it. The skills and discipline developed in your trigoometry class will help you no matter what career you choose.
Trigonometry is used in the fields of design, music, navigation, cartography, manufacturing, physics, optics, projectile motion, and any other field which involves angles, fields, waves, harmonics, and vectors.
you wouldn't
Trigonometry is used in design of everything from buildings to instruments to appliances. It is also used in electronics, acoustics, EM radiation, flight, navigation, projectile motion, and nearly every every application of waves and forces in physics and engineering.
Trigonometry is essential to the study of higher mathematics (calculus) and to the understanding of many scientific and engineering principles. Trigonometry and calculus can be used to model many shapes, motions, and functions in daily life.
There are very few real life examples of nonagons. The only examples that I can think of are a few coins.
some real life examples are a water bottle, pipes, cans
what is the application of trigonometry in your life and future carrier
In my openion bubbles in the soap film is the real examples of it.
ATOMS are real life examples of atoms. They do exist.
A real life example of a coast is in Mississippi
Air
MT.Everest
You reading this answer.
Rdfyufufufgfngfgj
mea
real life example of exterior angles