It doesn't matter what type of triangle it is, or the length of the sides. The sum of the interior angles of a triangle always adds up to 180 degrees
The hypotenuse alone does not provide enough information to determine the area of a triangle.
Opposite, adjacent, hypotenuse.
The hypotenuse is always the longest of the three sides of a right triangle.
If each interior angle measures 174 degrees then it will have 60 sides
Each interior angle measures 150 degrees Each exterior angle measures 30 degrees
If the legs of a right triangle have measures of 9 and 12, the hypotenuse is: 15
A triangle with an hypotenuse has a right angle that measures 90 degrees and two other acute angles,
The hypotenuse alone does not provide enough information to determine the area of a triangle.
The sum of the measures of the interior angles of a heptagon is 900 degrees.
Opposite, adjacent, hypotenuse.
The length of the hypotenuse works out as 17 miles
find the sum of the measures of the interior angles of 13-gon.
Using Pythagoras: hypotenuse2 = one_leg2 + other_leg2 ⇒ hypotenuse = √(one_leg2 + other_leg2) = √(212 + 282) = √1225 = 35 units.
The hypotenuse measures 11.4 meters in length.
a^2 + b^2 = c^2. Therefore, the hypotenuse is (5^2 + 12^2)^1/2
Using Pythagoras' theorem: 2x2 = 144 x2 = 72 x = 6*sq rt of 2
A right triangle has a hypotenuse of 13 cm and one leg that measures 12 cm What is the length of the other leg?