Yes and it would be an equilateral triangle.
no it cannot represent as in angle triangle rule it doesnt prove that term
An isosceles triangle is a triangle with two sides of equal length.
No sides of a scalene triangle are the same length.
If all of its sides are the same length its an equilateral triangle. If only two of its sides are the same length it is an isosceles triangle. If all the sides are different lengths it is a scalene triangle
An equilateral triangle is a triangle with all sides the same length.
no it cannot represent as in angle triangle rule it doesnt prove that term
7cm
5cm, 5cm, and 5cm could represent the lengths of the sides of an equilateral triangle, or might indicate the length, width, and height of a cube.
The list that accompanies the question doesn't contain any numbers that could be the lengths of the sides of a triangle.
An isosceles triangle is a triangle that has two sides of equal length.
An isosceles triangle is a triangle with two sides of equal length.
If only two sides of a triangle are the same length it is an isosceles triangle. If all three sides are the same length it is an equilateral triangle.
No sides of a scalene triangle are the same length.
If all of its sides are the same length its an equilateral triangle. If only two of its sides are the same length it is an isosceles triangle. If all the sides are different lengths it is a scalene triangle
An equilateral triangle is a triangle with all sides the same length.
An isosceles triangle is a triangle that has two sides of equal length.
A Scalene triangle has no sides of equal length.