They have one right angle and two angles of 45 degrees each; the two sides adjacent to the right angle are equal in length; the hypotenuse is longer by a factor of the square root of 2, which is 1.414 to 3 decimal places.
Yes- but not all isosceles triangles are right triangles. Isosceles means that two sides are the same length, and two angles are the same.
no
isosceles are 45-45-90
Yes.
180 ANGLES
All isosceles triangles: - Have angles that add up to 180 degrees - Have two equal sides. The unequal side is called the base. - Have equal base angles. - Have areas and perimeters that can be found using the formulas Area=1/2 X (base X height) and Perimeter=side+side+side An equilateral triangle with a right angle is called a right isosceles triangle. Also, all equilateral triangles are isoceles triangles, but not all isosceles triangles are right triangles.
No. An isosceles right triangle is a special case. There are many right triangles which are not isosceles.
It can only have a maximum of one- and that is only if it is a right-angled isosceles triangle. ----------------------------------------------------- Yes not all isosceles triangles are right angle triangles - this is a special case.
It can only have a maximum of one- and that is only if it is a right-angled isosceles triangle. ----------------------------------------------------- Yes not all isosceles triangles are right angle triangles - this is a special case.
An isosceles triangle may have a right angle, but a right angle is not a requirement of all isosceles triangles.
No. Only right triangles do, and not all triangles can be right triangles. Equilateral triangles, for example, are always 60°-60°-60°. Isosceles and scalene triangles can be right triangles; all isosceles triangles have the additional useful property of being able to be split into two right triangles.
Equilateral, isosceles, scalene and right angle triangles.