No because these are the angles of a scalene triangle
3 acute angles each measuring 60 degrees
No; a right triangle cannot have two angles that are measured 38 and 54 degrees. This is because a right triangle must have one angle that is equal to 90 degrees, for this is a basic property of a right triangle. The sum of the angles in the triangle must be 180 degrees. In order to prove that there indeed cannot be a triangle with angles measuring 90, 38, and 54 degrees, you add the three. If their sum is greater than 180 degrees, then it is impossible; as in this case, where the sum totals to 182 degrees.
A right angles triangle, as one of the angles in the triangle is 90 degrees.
It will have 1 right angle and 2 acute angles each measuring 45 degrees.
A triangle has a total of 180 degrees, as the sum of its three interior angles always equals 180 degrees. A square, being a quadrilateral, has a total of 360 degrees, with each of its four right angles measuring 90 degrees.
The triangle with angles measuring 40, 50, and 90 degrees is a right triangle. In a right triangle, one of the angles is always 90 degrees, making it a right-angled triangle. The other two angles are acute angles, measuring less than 90 degrees each. The sum of the interior angles of any triangle is always 180 degrees.
3 acute angles each measuring 60 degrees
No; a right triangle cannot have two angles that are measured 38 and 54 degrees. This is because a right triangle must have one angle that is equal to 90 degrees, for this is a basic property of a right triangle. The sum of the angles in the triangle must be 180 degrees. In order to prove that there indeed cannot be a triangle with angles measuring 90, 38, and 54 degrees, you add the three. If their sum is greater than 180 degrees, then it is impossible; as in this case, where the sum totals to 182 degrees.
A right angles triangle, as one of the angles in the triangle is 90 degrees.
The side adjacent to the forty degrees of a right triangle with a hypotenuse of 6 meters and one of its angles measuring forty degrees is: 4.6 meters.
It will have 1 right angle and 2 acute angles each measuring 45 degrees.
A triangle has a total of 180 degrees, as the sum of its three interior angles always equals 180 degrees. A square, being a quadrilateral, has a total of 360 degrees, with each of its four right angles measuring 90 degrees.
An equilateral triangle can't be a right triangle since an equilateral triangle has all 60° angles, which are NOT right angles [measuring 90°]. If a triangle is a right triangle, then it has a right angle!
They both have 3 sides and 3 interior angles that add up to 180 degrees A right angle has a 90 degree angle and 2 acute angles An equilateral triangle has 3 equal acute angles each measuring 60 degrees
The two other angles are 45 degrees each. The three angles of every triangle always add up to 180 degrees. -- A right triangle is a triangle that has a right angle in it. -- A right angle is 90 degrees. -- That leaves 90 degrees for the other two angles in the right triangle. -- If it happens to be isosceles, then the other two angles are equal. -- Those must both be 45 degrees.
Every triangle has three interior angles which total 180 degrees. A right triangle has one of the angles as 90 degrees.
An equilateral triangle has all three sides of equal length and all three angles measuring 60 degrees. A right angle, by definition, measures 90 degrees, which exceeds the angle measurements of an equilateral triangle. Since the sum of the angles in any triangle must equal 180 degrees, having one angle as 90 degrees would require the other two angles to sum to 90 degrees, violating the property of equal angles in an equilateral triangle. Therefore, it is impossible for an equilateral triangle to have a right angle.