A scalene triangle has no sides of equal length.
An isosceles triangle has two sides of equal length.
An equilateral triangle has all three sides of equal length.
isolies
They are: equilateral, isosceles, obtuse, scalene and right angle triangles
All triangles have exactly three sides. If the number of sides were anything other than three there would not be a triangle - of any kind.
Equilateral --> 3 equal sides Isosceles --> 2 equal sides only Scalene --> 3 unique sides
no. Equilateral triangles have all equal sides. Isoceles triangles only have 2 congruent sides. Isosceles triangles have 2 equal sides.
isolies
They are: equilateral, isosceles, obtuse, scalene and right angle triangles
All triangles have exactly three sides. If the number of sides were anything other than three there would not be a triangle - of any kind.
Equilateral --> 3 equal sides Isosceles --> 2 equal sides only Scalene --> 3 unique sides
All triangles have 3 sides and 3 interior angles that add up to 180 degrees. Equilateral triangles have 3 congruent sides. Isosceles triangles have 2 congruent sides. A right angle triangle can have 2 congruent sides if its interior angles are 90, 45, 45 degrees. A scalene or an obtuse triangle has no congruent sides.
no. Equilateral triangles have all equal sides. Isoceles triangles only have 2 congruent sides. Isosceles triangles have 2 equal sides.
equilateral triangle- all sides the same length isosceles triangle- 2 sides the same length scalene triangle- no sides the same length
No. Triangles all have three sides.
right triangle. obtuse triangle. acute triangle
Yes, there is a relationship between a polygon's number of sides and the number of triangles that can be formed within it. For a polygon with ( n ) sides, you can divide it into ( n - 2 ) triangles through triangulation. This means that as the number of sides increases, the number of triangles formed also increases linearly according to the formula ( n - 2 ).
it has 4 sides that are triangles
Oh, dude, you're talking about triangles now? Alright, so, like, triangles can be classified based on their sides - you've got equilateral triangles (all sides are equal), isosceles triangles (two sides are equal), and scalene triangles (all sides are different lengths). It's like a little triangle party with different sides showing up!