If you mean an isosceles triangle then no because all triangles have no diagonals
an isosceles triangle is a triangle that means two of the triangles sides have the same length and two angles are the same
An isosceles triangle is a triangle that has two sides of equal length. A right triangle has an interior angle of 90 degrees. A right isosceles triangle has both characteristics. The 90 degree angle will be the angle formed by the sides of equal length.
If the sloped sides of an isosceles trapezium are extended to a vertex, you would get an isosceles triangle.If the sloped sides of an isosceles trapezium are extended to a vertex, you would get an isosceles triangle.If the sloped sides of an isosceles trapezium are extended to a vertex, you would get an isosceles triangle.If the sloped sides of an isosceles trapezium are extended to a vertex, you would get an isosceles triangle.
If you extend the two legs of an isosceles trapezoid until they intersect, you get an isosceles triangle.
Isosceles mean having two sides of equal length.
Isosceles. It is a property of a triangle where two of the sides are the same length.
If you mean an isosceles triangle then no because all triangles have no diagonals
Isosceles triangle.One option is an isosceles triangle.After 'H'? If you mean i, that would be isosceles triangle. If you really meant 'H', then hexagon would work.
an isosceles triangle is a triangle that means two of the triangles sides have the same length and two angles are the same
First of all there is no such thing, second isosceles trapezoid/trapezium are two sides&angles the same which it don't have any.
If you mean "isosceles" triangle, the perimeter is the sum of twice the known side plus the base.
It depends on isosceles WHAT? There are isosceles triangles, isosceles trapezia, for example.
it means two sides are equal and the other is not
What is 'isococeles'? Do you mean 'Isosceles'. If so , then you need to specify 'x' , be it an angle or a side length.
In an isosceles triangle, two angles, and therefore sides (Base Angle Theorem), are congruent. This does not mean that all isosceles triangles are also right triangles - there is only one (45, 45, 90 triangle).
In an isosceles triangle and an isosceles trapezoid, both base angles are congruent