Yes
To draw a triangle with an area of 6cm², you need to determine the base and height of the triangle. The formula for the area of a triangle is 0.5 * base * height. So, if the area is 6cm², you could have a base of 4cm and a height of 3cm, or a base of 6cm and a height of 2cm. Once you have the base and height values, you can draw the triangle with those measurements.
A right-angle triangle is half of a square or rectangle. Draw a square or rectangle and draw a line from one corner to the corner diagonally opposite. You now have two triangles of the same area.
The area of qa triangle is always half of the area of a rectangle with the same dimensions
Because - if you draw lines at right-angles from the base of a triangle vertically until they reach the highest point, then draw a horizontal line that connects those points, touching the highest point of the triangle - the area outside the triangle (but inside the resulting quadrilateral) is exactly half the area of the quadrilateral.
Draw a right angled triangle with legs of 4cm and 6cm
an iscoceles triangle
Most people, when asked to draw a triangle, would probably draw an acute or maybe a right triangle.
There are many different triangles that have an area of three square inches, here's one way to draw one: Draw a rectangle whose area is six square inches (or imagine what one's dimensions would be, e.g. 6x1 or 3x2) and cut it in half diagonally to make a right triangle that has an area of three square inches.
-- Just go ahead and draw a triangle. Any triangle.-- Did you do it ? Good.-- Your triangle has three angles in it.
first draw a triangle, then a rectangle, and lastly draw another triangle on both side of the rectangle... if you want draw a smoke at the bottom.
You can draw a triangle with two obtuse angles in a sphere