You can always slide and flip any figure that you want to. But that will not make them the same.
That their sides are congruent.
koe
both must be proptional
The transitive property states that if A is equal to B, and B is equal to C, then A is equal to C. In the context of similar figures, this property holds true. If two figures are similar, and one figure is congruent to a third figure, then the second figure is also congruent to the third figure.
true
Mathmatics
True.
true
That their sides are congruent.
koe
both must be proptional
The ratio between corresponding sides or angles of similar triangles are equal
The transitive property states that if A is equal to B, and B is equal to C, then A is equal to C. In the context of similar figures, this property holds true. If two figures are similar, and one figure is congruent to a third figure, then the second figure is also congruent to the third figure.
True
No, in general that is not true. For two similar figures it is true. But you can easily design two different figures that have the same perimeters and different areas, or the same area and different perimeters. For example, two rectangles with a different length-to-width ratio.
no, according to basic geometry(6th grade, even), the sides are NOT always congruent.
True, Yes