Regular polygons are those polygons that are bothequilateral (all sides congruent) and equilateral (all interior angles congruent).
Regular polygons such as squares and equilateral triangles
an equilateral triangle is a triangle in which all three sides are equal.Equilateral means that all the sides in a figure are congruent. Regular polygons are all equilateral.
There cannot be an obtuse equilateral triangle. A rhombus is an equilateral quadrilateral with two obtuse angles (and two acute ones). Not sure if that counts as an obtuse equilateral. All regular polygons with more than four sides will be obtuse and equilateral. There are also other polygons that will meet these requirements. These will be squashed polygons in the same way that a rhombus is a squashed square.
They are regular polygons such as a square or an equilateral triangle.
Regular polygons are those polygons that are bothequilateral (all sides congruent) and equilateral (all interior angles congruent).
All regular polygons.
There are many polygons that are both equiangular and equilateral. For example, squares and equilateral triangles are both equiangular and equilateral polygons. The general term for polygons that are both equiangular and equilateral is regular.
this means that it is equiangular. All polygons are equiangular and equilateral (Equilateral means that all of the sides are congruent)
An equilateral polygon. All regular polygons, being equilateral, will have equal sides but it is not necessary that they are regular. A rhombus, for example, is equilateral but not regular.
Regular polygons such as squares and equilateral triangles
an equilateral triangle is a triangle in which all three sides are equal.Equilateral means that all the sides in a figure are congruent. Regular polygons are all equilateral.
There cannot be an obtuse equilateral triangle. A rhombus is an equilateral quadrilateral with two obtuse angles (and two acute ones). Not sure if that counts as an obtuse equilateral. All regular polygons with more than four sides will be obtuse and equilateral. There are also other polygons that will meet these requirements. These will be squashed polygons in the same way that a rhombus is a squashed square.
In geometry, an equilateral polygon is a polygon which has all sides of the same length. For instance, an equilateral triangle is a triangle of equal edge lengths. All equilateral triangles are similar to each other, and have 60 degree internal angles. : Any equilateral quadrilateral is a rhombus, which includes the square. : An equilateral polygon which is cyclic (its vertices are on a circle) is a regular polygon. Not all equilateral polygons are convex: all equilateral polygons with more than four sides, such as the pentagon, can be concave. Viviani's theorem holds for equiangular polygons (and also holds for equilateral ones): : The sum of distances from a point to the side lines of an equiangular [or equilateral] polygon does not depend on the point and is that polygon's invariant.
They would be equilateral concave polygons. See the related link to see some diagrams.
Yes they normally are equiangular if the sides are equilateral
They are regular polygons as for example an equilateral triangle