no. Equilateral triangles have all equal sides. Isoceles triangles only have 2 congruent sides. Isosceles triangles have 2 equal sides.
Some triangles are equilateral, but not all of them. There are three types of triangles. Triangles which have three equal sides and three equal angles are called equilateral triangles. Isosceles triangles have two equal sides and two equal angles. Scalene triangles have no equal sides and no equal angles.
Equaliateral Triangles have all three sides and angles (60 degrees)equal Isosceles Triangles have to equal sides and angles Scalene Triangles have no equal sides or angles
Some people classify isosceles triangles as having at least two equal sides, while other say that they must have exactly two equal sides. So, depending on your definition, some isosceles triangles may have all equal sides, but equilateral triangles always have three equal sides.
No, not at all, all isosceles triangles aren't equilateral since an equilateral triangle is a triangle with all of its sides equal, i.e. all sides of an equilateral triangle are equal, but in an isosceles triangle only two of its sides are equal.
All triangles have 3 sides but an isosceles triangle has 2 equal sides and an equilateral triangle has 3 equal sides.
An equilateral triangle is a triangle where all of the sides are of equal length. An isosceles triangle is a triangle that has only two sides that are of equal length.
All the corresponding sides in congruent triangles are equal All the corresponding angles in congruent triangles are equal
Triangles are equilateral triangles only when all of their 3 sides are equal in lengths.
No, not all isoceles triangles can be equilateral triangles because an equilateral triangle has sides that are all equal to each other and an isoceles triangle has only two sides that are equal to each other.
A pentagon
No.Equilateral triangles must have equal angles (all 60 degrees) and equal length sides; there are also:Isosceles triangles which have two equal angles and two equal sides;Scalene triangles which have all three sides, and hence all three angles, of different lengths;Right angled triangles (which can have all sides of different lengths, or two sides of equal length) have (as the name suggests) one right angle. This means Pythagoras and the trigonometric ratios can be used on its side lengths.