Yes. AB, AC, BC and EF.
It would be a straight line of length bc
Commutativity.
All the trigonometric functions are derived from the right angled triangle. If we consider the three sides (AB, BC, CA) of a triangle and the included angle. There is a possibility of getting six functions based on the ratios like AB/AC, BC/AC, AB/BC, BC/AB, AC/BC, AC/AB . So we will have six trigonometric functions
Do you mean F = abc + abc + ac + bc + abc' ? *x+x = x F = abc + ac + bc + abc' *Rearranging F = abc + abc' + ab + bc *Factoring out ab F = ab(c+c') + ab + bc *x+x' = 1 F = ab + ab + bc *x+x = x F = bc
Line AB is perpendicular to BC. you can say this like; Line AB is at a right angle to BC
mdpt: point line or plane that bisects a line so that AB=BC. mdpt theorem: point or plane that bisects a line so that AB is congruent to BC.
Yes. AB, AC, BC and EF.
yes
It would be a straight line of length bc
yes it is
yes because ab plus bc is ac
Commutativity.
Definition of midpoint: a point, line, or plane that bisects a line so that AB=BC Midpoint theorem: a point, or plane that bisects a line so that line AB is congruent to line BC. A-----------------------------------------------B----------------------------------------------------C The definition of midpoint refers to equality, while midpoint theorem refers to congruency.
It is easiest to draw it using two right angled triangles.Draw a line AB that is 2 units long. From B, draw BC which is perpendicular to AB and 2 units long. Join AC. From C, draw CD which is perpendicular to AC (clockwise if BC is clockwise from AB, or anticlockwise if BC is anticlockwise) and make CD 2 uinits long. Then AD is a line segment which is sqrt(12) units long.
answerDraw two lines of equal lengths perpendicular to AB on the same side of AB and extend the line formed by joining the two end points of the two perpendicular lines which does not line on the line AB.
1.) To prove three points (A, B, C) are colinear, one strategy is to prove that the angle between line segment AB and line segment BC is 180 degrees. 2.) When two or more points are on the same line.