Scalene triangles those triangles in which all the sides are of different lengths, but in isosceles triangles two sides of the triangle are equal in length. Therefore, no scalene triangle can ever be isosceles.
In an equilateral triangle, all three sides are of the same length and all three angles are the same measure (60 degrees). In a scalene triangle, all three sides are of different length and all three angles are ofdifferentmeasure.
No, those are two different types of triangles. An isosceles triangle has two sides of the same length and one side of different length; a scalene triangle has three sides which are all of different length.
scalene triangles
isosceles - 2 sides of the triangle are the same length scalene - no sides are the same length equilateral- all sides are the same length
an scalene is a triangle with no sides the same lengthas in an equilateral has sides all the same length
All three of these terms describe different types of triangles. An isosceles triangle has two sides of equal length. An equilateral triangle has three sides of equal length. A scalene triangle has sides that each have a different length.
Scalene triangles are polygons like all triangles. The lengths of the sides of scalene triangle are all different.
Right triangles have one right angle. Scalene triangleIs have sides of unequal length. Right scalene triangles combine those aspects.
Obtuse triangles can also be scalene if none of the sides are of equal length. Otherwise, it is an isosceles triangle.
Oh, dude, you're talking about triangles now? Alright, so, like, triangles can be classified based on their sides - you've got equilateral triangles (all sides are equal), isosceles triangles (two sides are equal), and scalene triangles (all sides are different lengths). It's like a little triangle party with different sides showing up!
If no two sides of a triangle have the same length, then the figure is called a "scalene" triangle. Some (but not all) scalene triangles are also right triangles.