The 3 interior angles of any triangle add up to 180 degrees
130 degrees is the measure of the base angles of an isosceles triangle whose vertex has a measure of 50 degrees.
The angles in a triangle will always equal 180 degrees. 180 - 48.3 - 33.6 = 98.1
A right triangle.
No. A triangle has 180 degrees in it. A right triangle has an angle of 90 degrees. That leaves the other two angles to total 90 as well. 38+54=92 which would make the triangle equal 182 degrees. this is not possible.
If two angles of a triangle each measure 45 degrees, the third angle measures 90 degrees. This is because of the Triangle Sum Theorem - The sum of the measure of the interior angles of a triangle is 180 degrees. If you know that two of the angles total to be 90 degrees, you can subtract that 90 degrees from the total 180. The result is 90 degrees.
No because the 3 interior angles of a triangle must add up to 180 degrees
A triangle can't measure 75 degrees. A measure in degrees applies to angles, not to polygons such as triangles. In a triangle on a flat surface, the sum of angles is 180°.
If the 3 interior angles of a triangle each measure 60 degrees then it is an equilateral triangle
The sum of the angles of any triangle is 180 degrees.
90 degrees
180 degrees
A triangle's angles always total 180 degrees