It is true
Sides, angles and vertices. :)))
false
Every triangle has three sides and three angles. In a right triangle, the side that is not part of the right angle is called the hypotenuse.
The basic parts of a triangle are its three sides and three angles. The sides are classified as the base, height, and the other two sides, while the angles include the vertex angles and the base angles. Secondary parts include the altitude (perpendicular from a vertex to the opposite side), median (line from a vertex to the midpoint of the opposite side), and the centroid (the point where medians intersect). Other secondary parts can include the circumcircle and incircle, which relate to the triangle's circumradius and inradius, respectively.
A triangle has three sides and three angles. Sides are measured in units of length. Angles are measured in angular units, like radians, degrees, or grads. A side can never be equal to an angle. So, of the 6 quantifiable parts of a triangle, the greatest possible uniformity occurs with 3 equal sides and 3 equal angles. When that occurs, you have an "equilateral" triangle.
true
The tree main parts of a triangle are the sides, the angles and the vertices.
Sides, angles and vertices. :)))
false
Its sides, its angles and its vertices.
True
Three vertices, three line segments, three angles.
Yes
The angles, sides and vertices that are in the same location in congruent figures.
4 sides 4 right angles 2 diagonals 4 vertices
Every triangle have 6 main parts: 3 sides and 3 angles. On a right triangle one of the angles has to be a right angle, meaning it has a 90 degree angle.
Every triangle has three sides and three angles. In a right triangle, the side that is not part of the right angle is called the hypotenuse.