If a triangle is isosceles, then it is equilateral. To find the converse of a conditional, you switch the antecedent ("If ____ ...") and consequent ("... then ____."). (Of course, if not ALL isosceles triangles were equilateral, then the converse would be false.)
If you mean "isosceles" triangle, the perimeter is the sum of twice the known side plus the base.
if you know what a acute triangle looks like and you know what a isosceles triangle looks like just combined them together and then find the angles and degrees you'll find what a acute isosceles triangle looks like if you got the degrees right and angles
isoselceles triangel is tow sides areequal
In an isosceles triangle, the two angles at the bottom are equal. Subtract the sum of the two bottom angles from 180 to find how many degrees are in the top angle.
An isosceles triangle has 3 sides 2 of which are equal in length
The step to verify an isosceles triangle is: 1) Find the intersection points of the lines. 2) Find the distance for each intersection points. 3) If 2 of the distance are the same then it is an isosceles triangle.
To find the circumradius of an isosceles triangle, the formula is:1/8[(a^2/h)+4h]in which h is the height of the triangle and a is the base of the triangle.
Sorry, there is no such thing as a rectangular triangle.
If a triangle is an isosceles triangle as well as being a right-angled triangle, the size of the two angles (that are not right angles) are 45 degrees.
An isosceles triangle has 2 equal base angles and its height is perpendicular from its apex to the centre of its base
V= area of the triangle x length
Only a right triangle has a hypotenuse. An isosceles triangle can be a right triangle but it doesn't have to be. If it's not, then it doesn't have a hypotenuse.
If a triangle is isosceles, then it is equilateral. To find the converse of a conditional, you switch the antecedent ("If ____ ...") and consequent ("... then ____."). (Of course, if not ALL isosceles triangles were equilateral, then the converse would be false.)
Type in isosceles triangle in google images and you will find lots of pics.
If you mean "isosceles" triangle, the perimeter is the sum of twice the known side plus the base.
You look at the lengths of the sided of the triangle. If the two lengths are same, the triangle is an isosceles triangle. If all the lengths are same, the triangle is an equilateral triangle. If none of the lengths are same, the triangle is a scalene triangle.