Well this could be the slope of the hypotenuse. Or it could be the tangent of the angle adjacent to one of the sides [tan Θ = opposite/adjacent ]
it depends on how long the triangle is
The ratio of the lengths of the hypotenuse to the shortest side is 2, and the ratio of the lengths of the two sides adjacent to the right angle is the square root of 3.
A triangle with a right angle and different lengths for sides is a right, scalene triangle.
Any triangle whose sides are in the same ratio with the corresponding sides of ABC.
Yes, it is.
Proportional to the sine of the angles opposite them.
it depends on how long the triangle is
There can be no tangent side. The tangent of an angle, in a right angled triangle, is a ratio of the lengths of two sides.
The ratio of the lengths of the hypotenuse to the shortest side is 2, and the ratio of the lengths of the two sides adjacent to the right angle is the square root of 3.
Sine Cosine Tangent Cotangent Secant Cosecant
A triangle with a right angle and different lengths for sides is a right, scalene triangle.
A right triangle * * * * * No, it is a scalene triangle.
Any triangle whose sides are in the same ratio with the corresponding sides of ABC.
A triangle with no right angle and sides of different lengths is a scalene triangle.
In Euclidean geometry, 180. Other answers are possible, depending on the surface on which the triangle is drawn.
Yes, it is.
True