False
No. The angle bisector is a line. Where the three lines meet is the median. In an equilateral triangle the INTERSECTION of the angle bisectors is the median.
Yes it is, if the point isn't equidistant from both sides, then it cannot be on the angle bisector.
angle bisector
A median is a line drawn from the centre of a side of a triangle to the opposite vertex. Only in two cases does it also bisect the angle :- 1) All three medians of an equilateral triangle bisect the angle of the opposite vertex. 2) One median (from the unequal side to the enclosed angle of the two equal sides) bisects the angle of the opposite vertex.
Equidistant from the two sides of an angle.
Angle bisectors are.
The median of a triangle bisects its side
No. The angle bisector is a line. Where the three lines meet is the median. In an equilateral triangle the INTERSECTION of the angle bisectors is the median.
Angle bisectors intersect at the incenter which is equidistant from the sides
Yes it is, if the point isn't equidistant from both sides, then it cannot be on the angle bisector.
no!
The common intersection of the angle bisectors of a triangle is called the incenter. It is the center of the inscribed circle of the triangle, and is equidistant from the three sides of the triangle.
angle bisector
Not every triangle has to have an obtuse angle.
An isosceles or an equilateral triangle perhaps?
Every point on the bisector of an angle is equidistant from the sides of that angle. It is understood that the distance of a point from a line is the length of the perpendicular dropped from the point to the line.
If the triangle is really isosceles, and it's not lying on one of the equal sides, then the altitude is always a median.