It is a right angle triangle or an isosceles right angle triangle
If you mean angles then it is a right angle triangle or an isosceles right angle triangle
It depends on the triangle, whether it's an isoscelese, scalene, equlateral, obtuse, right angle or acute triangle. All the angles have to add up to 180 degres no matter what, so a right angle triangle could be 90, 45 and 45.
Yes as long as the right angle is not the repeated angle. You would have the angles 90°, 45° and 45°
yes, one angle 90 degrees(right angle), the other two 45 degrees 90 + 45 + 45 = 180
It is a right angle triangle or an isosceles right angle triangle
If you mean angles then it is a right angle triangle or an isosceles right angle triangle
It depends on the triangle, whether it's an isoscelese, scalene, equlateral, obtuse, right angle or acute triangle. All the angles have to add up to 180 degres no matter what, so a right angle triangle could be 90, 45 and 45.
Yes as long as the right angle is not the repeated angle. You would have the angles 90°, 45° and 45°
yes, one angle 90 degrees(right angle), the other two 45 degrees 90 + 45 + 45 = 180
it is a right angle triangle
When it is an isosceles right angled triangle: with angles that are 90-45-45.
Not normally but if it has angles of 90, 45 and 45 degrees it is then both a right angle and an isosceles triangle
It is a right angle triangle
Yes normally, unless it is a right angle isosceles triangle which will have angles of 90, 45 and 45 degrees.
Not necessarily. The two equal angles in an isosceles triangle must both be acute angles. If they were right angles or obtuse angles then a triangle could not be formed. If the two equal angles are less than 45° each then the third angle is an obtuse angle. If they are both 45° then the third angle is a right angle and if they are both greater than 45° then the third angle is an acute angle.
A right angle triangle or an isosceles triangle.