No because these are the angles of a scalene triangle
3 acute angles each measuring 60 degrees
A right angles triangle, as one of the angles in the triangle is 90 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.
It will have 1 right angle and 2 acute angles each measuring 45 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!
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
A right angles triangle, as one of the angles in the triangle is 90 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.
It will have 1 right angle and 2 acute angles each measuring 45 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.
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.
right angled triangle
It is impossible to have a triangle with two right angles. This is because a triangle=180 degrees. Two right angles would make up all of the 180 degrees.