If the hypothenuse and leg of one triangle are congruent to the hypothenuse and leg of another triangle, then the triangles are congruent.
cosine
That is called a "hypothenuse".
sqrt (25 + 16) ie 6.4
From the Pythagorean theorem, leg1squared plus leg2 squared = hypothenuse squared. If leg 1 = 124 and hypothenuse is 155 then 155 squared - 124 squared is 8649 and the leg2 is square root of 8649 = 93 cm
a hypothenuse is a side of the triangle that is not a leg the hypothenuse formula is c2 = a2 + b2, where c is the lengt of the hypothenuse. The hypothenuse is the longest side of a triangle. That's why a triangle with 60 degree angles does not have a hypotenuse, onlye three sides of an equivalent length.
If the hypothenuse and leg of one triangle are congruent to the hypothenuse and leg of another triangle, then the triangles are congruent.
cosine
Use Pythagoras' Theorem - the hypothenuse of a right triangle is square root of (a2 + b2)Use Pythagoras' Theorem - the hypothenuse of a right triangle is square root of (a2 + b2)Use Pythagoras' Theorem - the hypothenuse of a right triangle is square root of (a2 + b2)Use Pythagoras' Theorem - the hypothenuse of a right triangle is square root of (a2 + b2)
That is called a "hypothenuse".
It is the angle formed by the hypothenuse and the longest of the other sides
The hypothnuse is from the Pythagorean theorem: side squared + side squared = hypothenuse squared So 9^2 + 40^2 = 81 + 1600 = 1681 hypothenuse = square root 1681 = 41 feet
No, only right triangle has one hypothenuse and two sides.
sqrt (25 + 16) ie 6.4
From the Pythagorean theorem, leg1squared plus leg2 squared = hypothenuse squared. If leg 1 = 124 and hypothenuse is 155 then 155 squared - 124 squared is 8649 and the leg2 is square root of 8649 = 93 cm
hypotenuse, hypotenuse
To the SQUARE of the hypothenuse. That's Pythagoras' Theorem.