They are congruent triangles.
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.
Only if the congruent angle is the angle between the two congruent sides (SAS postulate).
If triangles have the corresponding sides congruent then they are congruent. SSS If two triangles have two sides and an included angle congruent then they are congruent. SAS If two triangles have two angles and an included side congruent then they are congruent. ASA SSA doesn't work.
sssThere are five methods for proving the congruence of triangles. In SSS, you prove that all three sides of two triangles are congruent to each other. In SAS, if two sides of the triangles and the angle between them are congruent, then the triangles are congruent. In ASA, if two angles of the triangles and the side between them are congruent, then the triangles are congruent. In AAS, if two angles and one of the non-included sides of two triangles are congruent, then the triangles are congruent. In HL, which only applies to right triangles, if the hypotenuse and one leg of the two triangles are congruent, then the triangles are congruent.
Yes, if two triangles have two congruent angles and two congruent sides then the triangles are guaranteed to be congruent. They only need two angles and one side congruent or two sides and one angle in order to be congruent.
An Isosceles triangle has two sides (and two angles) congruent.
No. All corresponding sides and angles have to be congruent for the triangles to be congruent.
Not every acute triangle has two congruent sides, although some do, in which case they are called isosceles triangles.
There are three types of triangles. Equilateral triangles have three congruent sides and three sixty-degree angles. Isosceles triangles have two congruent sides and the angles opposite those two sides are also congruent. Scalene triangles have no congruent sides or angles.
The triangles are also congruent.
False