Right triangle square rectangles
An example is Pythagoras's Theorem: that the sum of the squares of the two shorter side lengths of a triangle with a right-angle is equal to the square of the length of the side opposite the right angle.
Yes because the dimensions given comply with Pythagoras' theorem for a right angle triangle
No but nearly
no an isosceles triangle can not be a right angle triangle because with an isosceles the two sides meet at a point creating a vertisce which a right angle triwngle does not have hope this helpsImproved Answer:-Yes it can providing the interior angles are 90 45 45 degrees which will give a triangle of two equal sides making it both an isosceles triangle and a right angle triangle.
The right-angle triangle measures 28cm by 35cm. Such a triangle is half of a rectangle.Therefore 28 x 35 = 980cm2 is the area of a rectangle.980 / 2 = 490cm2 will give the area of the triangle (which is 490cm2).
Using a protractor which should give a measure of a 90 degree angle and two acute angles that add up to 90 degrees.
Triangles can only have a maximum of one right angle (90°), as the sum (addition) of a triangle's internal angles must be equal to 180°, no more, no less.
The measure of the sides of the triangle is 12x +2, 13x +1 and x-15. Give the value of each side.
"If two legs of one right triangle are congruent to the corresponding legs of another right triangle, then the two triangles are congruent."Example:Given:
Correcting output on a plus computer is easy. All you have to do is right check and see the right answer.
It's a confused give way sign in London