Whatever you like. For a start, it depends on what the shape is - triangle, quadrilateral, other polygon. Then on what some of the other sides are.
True. In any triangle, the longest side is always opposite the largest angle; the shortest side is always opposite the shortest angle; and the middle length side is always opposite the middle size angle. In an isosceles triangle, there is no middle length side; and the two sides of equal length are opposite the angles of equal size. In an equilateral triangle, all sides are the same length, as are all the angles.
The side opposite the 30° angle is 1/2 the hypotenuse or 0.5 hThe side opposite the 60° angle is (sin60°) times the hypotenuse or about 0.866 h
The hypotenuse is the longest side of a right angle triangle and it is opposite the 90 degree right angle.
It's 1/2 of the length of the hypotenuse.
If the side opposite a 30 degree angle in a right triangle is 12.5 meters, the hypotenuse is: 25 meters.25 meters
you cannot determine the sides of a triangle by the angle measures alone because any triangle with different side lengths can have these angle measurements. However if you do know the length of any one of the sides, you can calculate the lengths of the other two sides.The shortest side is the one opposite the 30 degree angle.The hypotenuse (opposite the 90 degree angle) is always twice the length of the shortest side opposite the 30 degree angle.The side opposite the 60 degree angle is always the length of the side opposite the 30 degree angle times the square root of three (about 1.73205).
If you have an angle then the length of the side OPPOSITE that angle divided by the length of the HYPOTENUSE. (O/H) (HYPOTENUSE is the side opposite the 90 degree angle) or (y/x) and a lot of other cool ways.
I assume your 90 degree angle is on the right and the 30 degree angle is opposite that. ( degree mode ) sin theta = opposite/hypotenuse sin 30 degrees = opp./44 = 22
It depends on the length of the other two sides which creates that angle. Not enough information was given. However, you can simply use the Cosine rule to find it if the other two lengths are known. a2=b2+c2- 2bccosA (A=30 and a is the length of the side opposite to 30 degree angle; b and c is the length of the sides which makes up the 30 degree angle)
In a right triangle with a 30-degree angle, the length of the side opposite the angle is half the length of the hypotenuse. Therefore, if the side opposite the 30-degree angle is 12.5 meters, the hypotenuse would be 12.5 meters × 2, which equals 25 meters. Rounding to the nearest tenth, the hypotenuse is 25.0 meters.
In a 30-60-90 triangle, the lengths of the sides follow a specific ratio: the side opposite the 30-degree angle is half the length of the hypotenuse, and the side opposite the 60-degree angle is ( \sqrt{3} ) times the length of the shorter side. For example, if the hypotenuse is 2, the side lengths could be 1 (opposite the 30-degree angle) and ( \sqrt{3} ) (opposite the 60-degree angle). Therefore, a valid set of side lengths could be 1, ( \sqrt{3} ), and 2.
The length of the side opposite the 60° angle is about 14.72(sin 60°) = 0.866The length of the side opposite the 30° angle is 8.5(sin 30°) = 0.5
In a right angles triangle the sides are named the hypotenuse (the side opposite the right angle) and the other two sides are called the adjacent and the opposite sides. 1) The sine of an angle = length of the opposite side ÷ length of the hypotenuse. 2) The cosine of an angle = length of the adjacent side ÷ length of the hypotenuse. Using 1) The length of the hypotenuse = length of the opposite side ÷ the sine of the angle. Using tables or a calculator obtain the sine of the angle and divide this into the length of the opposite side. The result will be the length of the hypotenuse.
To find the adjacent side's length in a right triangle when you have the angle and the opposite side's length, you can use the tangent function. The tangent of the angle is equal to the ratio of the opposite side to the adjacent side: ( \tan(\theta) = \frac{\text{opposite}}{\text{adjacent}} ). Rearranging this formula gives you the adjacent side's length: ( \text{adjacent} = \frac{\text{opposite}}{\tan(\theta)} ). Simply plug in the values for the opposite side and the angle to calculate the adjacent side's length.
the tangent of an angle is equal to the length of the opposite side from the angle divided by the length of the side adjacent to the angle.
sin θ : 1 = the length of opposite side to angle θ : the length of the hypotenuse
The 90 degree angle.