legs of an isosceles triangle
The isosceles triangle theorem states that if two sides of a triangle are congruent, then the angles opposite those sides are congruent.
The Isosceles Triangle Theorem:If two sides of a triangle are congruent, then the angles opposite the sides are congruent.The Converse of Isosceles Triangle Theorem:If two angles of a triangle are congruent, then the sides opposite those angles are congruent.
An isosceles triangle.Equilateral triangles have 3 congruent sides, so also technically have 2 congruent sides.Not scalene.isoscelesAn isosceles triangle :)
A triangle that has at least two congruent sides is called an isosceles triangle. It has two equal sides and two equal angles.
An isosceles triangle has two congruent sides.
An isosceles triangle
An isosceles triangle.Equilateral triangles have 3 congruent sides, so also technically have 2 congruent sides.Not scalene.isoscelesAn isosceles triangle :)
The statement is false. An isosceles triangle has at least two sides that are congruent, not necessarily three. A triangle with three congruent sides is called an equilateral triangle, which is a specific type of isosceles triangle.
Their called (legs)
Isosceles Triangle :)
an isosceles triangle.
an isosceles triangle
isosceles
No because only 2 of its 3 sides are congruent in an isosceles triangle but all 3 sides of an equilateral triangle are congruent.
Not necessarily. The details are quite vague here since the question doesn't give the specific number of sides and angles.A triangle that has all congruent angles and sides is called an equilateral triangle.A triangle that has two congruent angles and two congruent sides is called an isosceles triangle.
It has 2 congruent sides and a base
That may vary. The only requirement for being called "isosceles triangle" is that two of the angles are congruent. (This is equivalent to the statement that two of the sides are congruent.)That may vary. The only requirement for being called "isosceles triangle" is that two of the angles are congruent. (This is equivalent to the statement that two of the sides are congruent.)That may vary. The only requirement for being called "isosceles triangle" is that two of the angles are congruent. (This is equivalent to the statement that two of the sides are congruent.)That may vary. The only requirement for being called "isosceles triangle" is that two of the angles are congruent. (This is equivalent to the statement that two of the sides are congruent.)