Yes and they would be called similar triangles
Equaliateral Triangles have all three sides and angles (60 degrees)equal Isosceles Triangles have to equal sides and angles Scalene Triangles have no equal sides or angles
Some triangles are equilateral, but not all of them. There are three types of triangles. Triangles which have three equal sides and three equal angles are called equilateral triangles. Isosceles triangles have two equal sides and two equal angles. Scalene triangles have no equal sides and no equal angles.
If the angles of two triangles are equal the triangles are similar. AAA If you have three angles on both triangles these must be equal for the triangles to be similar. SAS If you have an angle between two sides and the length of the sides and the angle are the same on both triangles, then the triangles are similar. And SSS If you know the three sides
All the Angles and sides on Triangles are always going to equal 180 Degrees
The shapes that have 3 sides and 3 vertices are called triangles. Triangles are classified based on the lengths of their sides and the measures of their angles. The three most common types of triangles are equilateral triangles (all sides and angles are equal), isosceles triangles (two sides and two angles are equal), and scalene triangles (all sides and angles are different).
There are three types of triangles. Scalene triangles have no congruent sides or angles, equilateral triangles have 3 congruent sides and 3 60degree angles, and isosceles triangles have two congruent sides and two congruent angles.
It can be, if two of the sides and two of the angles are equal. Triangles can be classified by their sides: equilateral, isosceles, scalene or by their angles: acute, right, obtuse. Combinations are possible.
Similar triangles.
They have equal sides and angles
iscosoles triangles have two angles that are equal with two of the same lenght sides and scalene triangle have no sides or angles that are the same
Equilateral triangles have that.
They have 2 equal sides and 2 equal base angles