make it a quadrangle & divide by 2.
Assuming that a traingle is meant to be a triangle, then the answer is none.
A acute triangle is a triangle with only acute angles (angles less than 90 degrees). No obtuse or right angle.
If it has no right angles, it is not a right triangle and therefore you cannot name a hypotenuse of that triangle. Which implies you cannot find that side's measure.
Not if the triangle is in a plane. But the answer is YES for a traingle on a convex surface - such as the surface of the earth.
Only when it has 3 unequal acute angles and 3 unequal sides that it is then a scalene triangle.
Assuming that a traingle is meant to be a triangle, then the answer is none.
If it has no right angles, it is not a right triangle and therefore you cannot name a hypotenuse of that triangle. Which implies you cannot find that side's measure.
You can't as there is no hypotenuse in an equilateral triangle. The hypotenuse is the side of a triangle which is opposite a right angle (90°); all angles in an equilateral triangle are 60°.
A acute triangle is a triangle with only acute angles (angles less than 90 degrees). No obtuse or right angle.
This traingle is an equilateral traingle: which consists of all the three sides and angles to be congruent. The angles inside the triangle, just like any normal traingle, add up to be 180 degrees. The opposite of this traingle is the Scalene triangle which has all the three sides to be Uncongruent and has different angles. All the angles of ALL traingles still add up to 180 Degrees. The Isoceles triangle consists of two equal sides and one extravagantly large one side. Therefore, because of the previous properties, an isosceles traingle has two congruent angles and usually one obtuse or acute angle. The last triangle, the right triangle, has one right angle. It is the only triangle that is capable with triginomical ratios and the Pythagorean Theorem.
Every triangle must have either 2 or 3 acute angles.
If it has no right angles, it is not a right triangle and therefore you cannot name a hypotenuse of that triangle. Which implies you cannot find that side's measure.
The interior angles of any triangle (not traingle) always sum to 180 degrees. Whether or not it is equilateral (not eguilateral) is irrelevant.
The measure of a triangle's angles if the hypotenuse is six and one side is one are:9.594 degrees80.41 degrees90 degrees
First of all, you have to make sure that it's a RIGHT triangle. That means that one of the angles in the triangle is 90 degrees. If not, then it's not a right triangle, and it doesn't have a hypotenuse. If it IS a right triangle, then the longest side is the hypotenuse.
Not if the triangle is in a plane. But the answer is YES for a traingle on a convex surface - such as the surface of the earth.
Only when it has 3 unequal acute angles and 3 unequal sides that it is then a scalene triangle.