yes
Improved Answer:-
No because an equilateral triangle has 3 equal sides whereas an isosceles triangle has only 2 equal sides
Not ... exactly. It would be closer to accurate to say that an equilateral triangle is a special case of the isosceles triangle.All equilateral triangles are (also) isosceles; but most isosceles triangles are not equilateral.
technically, triangle classes have a bulls-eye type name graph, with equilateral triangles in the middle, then isosceles, then scalene, so technically, some scalene triangles are isosceles and some are equilateral, but not all are.
No.
There are 5 types of triangles which are as follows:- Scalene Obtuse Right angle Isosceles Equilateral
It depends on what type of triangle it is.If it is equilateral then it will also be equiangular.If it is isosceles then it may be equiangular (it depends whether it is equilateral or not - an isosceles can be equilateral or it can just have two equal sides).Any other type of triangle will not be equiangular.
Not ... exactly. It would be closer to accurate to say that an equilateral triangle is a special case of the isosceles triangle.All equilateral triangles are (also) isosceles; but most isosceles triangles are not equilateral.
technically, triangle classes have a bulls-eye type name graph, with equilateral triangles in the middle, then isosceles, then scalene, so technically, some scalene triangles are isosceles and some are equilateral, but not all are.
An equilateral triangle is a special type of isosceles triangle. It has two equal sides, which makes it isosceles; its third side is also equal, making it equilateral, too.
No.
No because an equilateral triangle has 3 equal sides whereas an isosceles triangle has only 2 equal sides
There are 5 types of triangles which are as follows:- Scalene Obtuse Right angle Isosceles Equilateral
A triangle with 2 equal sides is known as an isosceles triangle. Sometimes it is defined as a triangle with 2 or more equal sides, which therefore includes equilateral triangles as a type of isosceles.
Isosceles triangles usually have two congruent sides, but the rule is that they actually have at least two. That means that they can also have a third congruent side. That means they are both equilateral and isosceles*, which I personally think is way too confusing, but that's how it works.Example: A triangle has angles of 60 degrees, 60 degrees, and 60 degrees. It is both isosceles and equilateral.*I think that equilateral triangles are actually a type of isosceles triangle, so that if you're asked on a math test, for example, whether a triangle is scalene, isosceles, or equilateral, you'd say equilateral.No, Isosceles is two equal sides, although an equilateral triangle CAN be an isosceles triangle. And Angles of an isosceles triangle are not known (given) - simply two equal sides.Three, like every other triangle.
Equilateral triangle
It depends on the type of triangle: -- scalene triangles have three sides of different length, and no lines of symmetry -- isoceles triangles have one line of symmetry that includes the apex -- equilateral triangles have three lines of symmetry, all bisectors through a vertex
It depends on what type of triangle it is.If it is equilateral then it will also be equiangular.If it is isosceles then it may be equiangular (it depends whether it is equilateral or not - an isosceles can be equilateral or it can just have two equal sides).Any other type of triangle will not be equiangular.
Equilateral triangles.