A triangle with all angles congruent are called equilateral. Each angle is 60 degrees.
No. Assuming the first refers to the measure in degrees, it is 60 times as large.
Only if the congruent angle is the angle between the two congruent sides (SAS postulate).
No, because they need not be congruent.
If the parallelogram is a square then angle A is congruent to angle B ,is congruent to angle C. AB is congruent to BC is congruent to CD.
yes
yes
A triangle with all angles congruent are called equilateral. Each angle is 60 degrees.
No. Assuming the first refers to the measure in degrees, it is 60 times as large.
Each angle is 60 degrees
angle B and angle D are supplements, angle B is congruent to angle D, angle A is congruent to angle A, or angle A is congruent to angle C
The transitive property is if angle A is congruent to angle B and angle B is congruent to angle C, then angle A is congruent to angle C.
HPE is an angle congruent to angle HRN.
TBP an angle congruent to angle PTB.
The Symmetric Property of Congruence: If angle A is congruent to angle B, then angle B is congruent to angle A. If X is congruent to Y then Y is congruent to X.
A congruent angle can also mean equal angle. So there is no set measurement of a congruent angle. Just the same as the angle it is equal to.
Only if the congruent angle is the angle between the two congruent sides (SAS postulate).