Want this question answered?
The answer depends on what is already known about the two triangles.
"What else" implies there is already something that is congruent. But since you have not bothered to share that crucial bit of information, I cannot provide a more useful answer. no correct
No, something could be similar to something else, but be bigger. To be congruent they need to be the exactly the same.
One shape cannot be congruent: you need two (or more) shapes which can be congruent to each other.
The lengths of the sides need not be congruent. For example, consider a square and a rectangle.
SSS is enough to show congruence.
__ - __ AC = XZ = is the similar sign
Angle "A" is congruent to Angle "D"
The answer depends on what is already known about the two triangles.
That depends on which sides have not been proven congruent yet.
"What else" implies there is already something that is congruent. But since you have not bothered to share that crucial bit of information, I cannot provide a more useful answer.
For a start, you would need to know what efg and jkl are.
Su jL
bc yz
Bc= qr
"What else" implies there is already something that is congruent. But since you have not bothered to share that crucial bit of information, I cannot provide a more useful answer.
Line segment BC is congruent to Line Segment YZ