The medians of a triangle are concurrent at a point called the centroid.
It is called the point of intersection of the two rays. Not a word, but a phrase.
There is no such thing as a 'no cornered; triangle. The word 'triangle' means ' three angles' thereby it has three corners. Another word for a triangle, but not generally used is a 'trigon'.
The term "trigon" is another word for triangle. Related terms are trilateral and deltoid.
An isosceles triangle
A ten-letter word for the side of a triangle is hypotenuse... Don't know if this helped (:
The point where the three medians of a triangle intersect is called a centroid (from the Latin word "centrum"-- center, and the Greek suffix -"oid"-- like, or similar to.
The prefix for the word three is tri-. This is shown in the common word: triangle.
They are both polygons. And the word is common, not commen.
apex
It is called the point of intersection of the two rays. Not a word, but a phrase.
Yes, the noun 'there' is a common noun; a general word for that place; a general word for that point or stage; a general word for a thing.The word 'there' is also an adverb, a pronoun, and an interjection.
"View" is one such.
The Latin word for triangle is trianguli. A triangle is defined as a closed plane figure having three sides and three angles.
Altitude is another word for a height of a triangle.
Triangle comes from the Latin word -- triangulum,
point I believe the word you're looking for is "intersection". Two non-parallel lines that lie in the same plane will have one point in common where they cross, and that point is the intersection.
There are two entirely different uses for the word in maths. Statistics: given a set of observations, the median is the one such that half the measurements are greater and half are smaller. When the observations are sorted in size order, it is the "middle" one. Geometry: the line joining a vertex of a triangle to the midpoint of the opposite side.