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Absolutely. Any two congruent right triangles will form a rectangle, and if the right triangles are isosceles right triangles, they will form a square.
Yes. They can form a kite.
Not necessarly. If the sum of two of the sides congruent to each other are greater than that of the sides opposite them, then no. If however the kite forms a rombus ot square, the diagnoles will form four congruent triangles with the base of both being the line of symmetry.
Not always. You could form a kite. That means that the two adjacent sides would be congruent, not the two opposite sides.
a square or rhombus
Corresponding Parts of Congruent Triangles is the full form od CPCT.
A square
Show that, if you have two triangles, two of the sides and the angle in between are congruent.
Two scalene right triangles that are congruent, that is, that have identical size and shape, if joined together to form a quadrilateral, will form a rectangle.
Absolutely. Any two congruent right triangles will form a rectangle, and if the right triangles are isosceles right triangles, they will form a square.
No it can not you can try all these different ways but it will not work
Yes. They can form a kite.
Any 2 congruent triangles joined together will form a 4 sided quadrilateral
If they are congruent right angle triangles then just join them together side by side to form a parallelogram.
That will depend on what type of triangle it is as for example if it is an isosceles triangle then it will form two congruent right angle triangles.
Not necessarly. If the sum of two of the sides congruent to each other are greater than that of the sides opposite them, then no. If however the kite forms a rombus ot square, the diagnoles will form four congruent triangles with the base of both being the line of symmetry.
No. A rhombus has all four sides of equal length. To split a rhombus into only 2 triangles, it must be split along a diagonal; which means that 2 of the sides of one of the triangles must be the same length as the sides of the rhombus, which being equal mean the triangles must be (at least) isosceles - scalene triangles will not work. Further, as the diagonal will be a common length to each of the triangles (the length of their third sides), it will form the base (ie the side opposite the vertex between the sides of equal length) of the isosceles triangles, and so the triangles must be to congruent isosceles triangles. If the diagonal has the same length as the side of the rhombus, then the two congruent triangles will be congruent equilateral triangles.