yes
two congruent triangles
you can't, because the Pythagorean theorem is for right triangles and the triangles formed by the diagonal of a parallelogram are not right triangles.
a hexagon * * * * * Depending on the shape and sizes of the triangles and where they are attached, you can also get a kite, a rectangle, a parallelogram, a decagon, octagon, pentagon.
If it is in the form of two inverted triangles, then there are 8 triangles. If only the outline is used, there are 0 triangles.
A parallelogram cannot have only two congruent sides, nor only two congruent angles.
Yes
two congruent triangles
two congruent triangles
The diagonal of a parallelogram divides it into two congruent triangles. This is because the diagonal creates two pairs of congruent triangles by dividing the parallelogram into two equal halves.
You would get two scalene triangles.
No triangle is a parallelogram. No two sides are parallel.
Two congruent triangles.
You can get 2 triangles by cutting a parallelogram in half
Yes
If you draw one diagonal across a parallelogram, it will split it into two congruent triangles. A rectangle is a parallelogram, with all four angles equal to 90°.
A parallelogram can be split into two congruent triangles known as "parallelogram halves" or "diagonally opposite triangles." These triangles share a common base, which is half the length of the parallelogram's diagonal. The height of each triangle is the perpendicular distance between the base and the opposite side of the parallelogram.
Two congruent triangles.. To prove it, use the SSS Postulate.