No if one angle is obtuse then they can't all be obtuse
No That would be an equilateral triangle
No. Similar triangles have all the same angles. An acute triangle can never have an obtuse angle, so the two cannot be similar.
Right triangle= has a right angle Acute triangle= has an acute angle Obtuse triangle= has an obtuse angle Equilateral triangle= all sides are the same length Scalene triangle= has no sides the same length Isosceles triangle= has only two sides the same length the triangles here make perfict dildose and condoms
No. A obtuse angle cannot be a right triangle- it is so wrong that it can't even be a left angle (While true, this part is of course, a joke...).There are two ways we name our triangles: using angles and how long the angles' sides are. The angles: there are three. The measurements: there are also three.The measurement triangles (aka. how long the angles and sides are) come in three types: the equilateral, the isosceles, and the scalene.The equilateral triangle has angles the measure sixty degrees and all sides measure the same length.The isosceles triangle has two sides that measure the same length, but one side has a different measurement. Same thing with the angles.The scalene triangle has all sides a different length with all sides a different measurement for the angles.The angled triangles work on three angles: the acute, the right, and the obtuse.The acute triangle's "A" point to its "B" point's angle is an angle that is acute.The right triangle's "A" to its "B" is a right angle...And the obtuse triangle's "A" to its "B" is an obtuse angle.Right angles and obtuse angles are way different...Right angles measure ninty degrees while obtuse angles measure more than ninty degrees but less than one hundred eighty degrees.Therefore, there is no such thing as an obtuse righttriangle.
An obtuse triangle is a type of triangle that has no congruent sides. Basically none of its sides are the same size.
No if one angle is obtuse then they can't all be obtuse
No, I can't. No such thing can exist. -- The interior angles of every triangle add up to 180 degrees. -- An obtuse triangle is one with an angle greater than 90 degrees in it. -- An equiangular triangle is one with all 3 angles the same size. If one of them is obtuse, then they're all obtuse. -- Three times (more than 90 degrees) = (more than 270 degrees). Not possible. -- So an obtuse equiangular triangle can't exist.
There's no such thing as an obtuse right triangle ... that's why it's so hard to draw. -- the three inside angles of every triangle add up to 180 degrees; no more, no less -- a right triangle has a right angle in it ... that's 90 degrees -- an obtuse triangle has an obtuse angle in it ... that's more than 90 degrees -- if you had both of them in the same triangle, those two angles alone would add up to (90) plus (more than 90) = more than 180. -- That's impossible. So an obtuse right triangle is impossible.
No That would be an equilateral triangle
If by equilangular you mean all angles are the same, then no - the sum of the angles of a triangle must be 180o, so if all 3 are the same they must each be 60o and the triangle is called equilateral. However, an obtuse isosceles triangle is possible as the equal angles are the other two angles to the obtuse angle.
No. Similar triangles have all the same angles. An acute triangle can never have an obtuse angle, so the two cannot be similar.
No. "Obtuse" means more than 90 degrees. "Obtuse" plus a right angle = more than 180 degrees.But the triangle has exactly 180 degrees in its 3 angles. So the same triangle can't have a right angleand an obtuse angle in it.
Right triangle= has a right angle Acute triangle= has an acute angle Obtuse triangle= has an obtuse angle Equilateral triangle= all sides are the same length Scalene triangle= has no sides the same length Isosceles triangle= has only two sides the same length the triangles here make perfict dildose and condoms
No. A obtuse angle cannot be a right triangle- it is so wrong that it can't even be a left angle (While true, this part is of course, a joke...).There are two ways we name our triangles: using angles and how long the angles' sides are. The angles: there are three. The measurements: there are also three.The measurement triangles (aka. how long the angles and sides are) come in three types: the equilateral, the isosceles, and the scalene.The equilateral triangle has angles the measure sixty degrees and all sides measure the same length.The isosceles triangle has two sides that measure the same length, but one side has a different measurement. Same thing with the angles.The scalene triangle has all sides a different length with all sides a different measurement for the angles.The angled triangles work on three angles: the acute, the right, and the obtuse.The acute triangle's "A" point to its "B" point's angle is an angle that is acute.The right triangle's "A" to its "B" is a right angle...And the obtuse triangle's "A" to its "B" is an obtuse angle.Right angles and obtuse angles are way different...Right angles measure ninty degrees while obtuse angles measure more than ninty degrees but less than one hundred eighty degrees.Therefore, there is no such thing as an obtuse righttriangle.
it really depends on what type of triangle, isoceles, obtuse, and scalene....theres lots but it depends what kind
Congruent means "equals" or "the same." Basically if you take a shape and flip it over or mirror it, or do anything else that copies the original in size and shape, it is congruent to the original. An obtuse triangle has one angle greater than 90* and an acute triangle has three angles that are less than 90*. No matter how you turn or flip or mirror those triangles, acute will never be obtuse and obtuse will never be acute. But if you take an acute triangle, and flip it upside down, it is still acute, and still has the same proportions, and therefore is congruent to the original.