isocles, equilateral, obtuse, acute, scalene, right
'Isocoles' and 'Equalateral' triangles are, scalene, right angled, and obtuse triangles are not.
Yes.
technically, triangle classes have a bulls-eye type name graph, with equilateral triangles in the middle, then isosceles, then scalene, so technically, some scalene triangles are isosceles and some are equilateral, but not all are.
There are countless number of shapes and triangles. Some different types of triangles are iscoleses, right and scalene. Some shapes are circle, triangle, square, hectagon, octagon, prism.....the list goes on and on and on......
If no two sides of a triangle have the same length, then the figure is called a "scalene" triangle. Some (but not all) scalene triangles are also right triangles.
Scalene triangles those triangles in which all the sides are of different lengths, but in isosceles triangles two sides of the triangle are equal in length. Therefore, no scalene triangle can ever be isosceles.
Obtuse triangles can also be scalene if none of the sides are of equal length. Otherwise, it is an isosceles triangle.
isocles, equilateral, obtuse, acute, scalene, right
No, a scalene is a scalene and an equilateral is an equilateral. They are NOT the same.
'Isocoles' and 'Equalateral' triangles are, scalene, right angled, and obtuse triangles are not.
You have acute, right, and obtuse triangles when referring to the measure of the largest angle, and you have equilateral, isosceles, and scalene triangles when referring to the congruency of the triangle's sides.
Yes.
Some types of triangles are: scalene triangle equilateral triangle isosceles triangle acute triangle right triangle obtuse triangle
No
technically, triangle classes have a bulls-eye type name graph, with equilateral triangles in the middle, then isosceles, then scalene, so technically, some scalene triangles are isosceles and some are equilateral, but not all are.
No...