bisector
di coo lam !
No, it is called an intercept.
An isosceles triangle with its apex cut off by a line parallel to the base.
To bisect an angle is to divide the angle in half.
bisector
side
di coo lam !
bisector
No, it is called an intercept.
Bisector of an angle in basically a line which is drawn from the vertex of the angle and bisect's or cuts the angle into 2 halves. For example we have angle PQR and if we cut a bisector through it then like: QS then SQR = 1/2*PQR
A bisector is a line that divides an angle into two equal parts. For example: in a right-angle (90 degrees) a bisector will cut the angle into two, each being 45 degrees.
In general 'to bisect' something means to cut it into two equal parts. The 'bisector' is the thing doing the cutting.In an angle bisector, it is a line passing through the vertex of the angle that cuts it into two equal smaller angles.Therefore it's in the definition.
Assuming that this refers to a line which has been cut into 2 parts, the parts would be called segments.
Then the two lines cut through by transversal line are parallel to each other.
An isosceles triangle with its apex cut off by a line parallel to the base.
No. Angles are not congruent. (Triangles may be congruent.)