No. For it to be equilateral it can't be a right triangle.
no because an equilateral triangle has 3 sides that have equal angles and is not 90 degrees
"It can be isosceles but not equilateral. Since a property of an equilateral triangle is having all angles equal (hence all sides equal), having one right angle changes that. The angles would be 90, some alpha, and some beta (not equal). Having the angles 90, 45, and 45 renders it an isosceles triangle." This is all well and correct -- for a triangle in a plane. But if your triangle is on a different surface, then you can indeed have an equilateral right triangle. If the triangle is on a sphere, for example, you can have right angles at three different points, each a quarter of the circumference from each other, and the resulting triangle (with sides that we would perceive as curved) would also be equilateral.
-- All three sides of an equilateral triangle are the same length. It's impossible for the sides of a right triangle to all be the same length. -- A right triangle must have a right angle in it. All three angles of an equilateral triangle are the same size. It's impossible for all 3 angles in a triangle to all be right angles.
In some respects, yes. It is half of an equilateral triangle.
Some types of triangles are: scalene triangle equilateral triangle isosceles triangle acute triangle right triangle obtuse triangle
These are some characteristics of equilateral triangle:All the sides of an equilateral triangle are equalIn an equilateral triangle each angle is angle is 60 degree.With an equilateral triangle, the radius of the incircle is exactly half the radius of the circumcircle.
Some examples are: circle, square, rectangle, right angle triangle, equilateral triangle
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.
A scalene triangle is a triangle that does not have a right angle in it (i.e. not a right angled triangle) and does not have two (or three) sides with the same length (i.e. not an isosceles triangle or an equilateral triangle). An example is a triangle with sides of length 4cm, 5cm and 6cm.
No...
Not quite because an equilateral has 3 equal sides whereas an isosceles triangle has only 2 equal sides but they both have 3 sides and 3 interior angles that add up to 180 degrees.