No. There is not even enough information to identify where the angles are!
Corresponding angles must be equal; in this case, that would be angle f. To prove that the two triangles are equal, you would have to prove that at least another pair of angles is also equal, for example, angle b equal to angle d. Or prove some other facts, like the ratio between certain corresponding sides.
It doesn't...I thought that was clear enough...
false
OTB
To prove that two right triangles are similar, all you need to show is that one of them has one acute angle that's equal to one acute angle of the other one.
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Corresponding angles must be equal; in this case, that would be angle f. To prove that the two triangles are equal, you would have to prove that at least another pair of angles is also equal, for example, angle b equal to angle d. Or prove some other facts, like the ratio between certain corresponding sides.
you can prove any one of these statements to prove that quadrilateral is a rectangle: -- Opposite sides are parallel and any one angle is a right angle. -- Opposite sides are equal and any one angle is a right angle. -- All four angles are right angles. -- Adjacent angles are complementary, and one of them is a right angle. -- Opposite sides are either equal or parallel, and area is equal to the product of two adjacent sides. -- Diagonals are equal.
The 5 ways to prove that two triangles are congruent are to find equal: 1) side-side-side 2) side-angle-side 3) angle-side-angle 4) angle-angle-angle 5) hypotenuse-leg
It doesn't...I thought that was clear enough...
GIN
To prove that two or more triangles are similar, you must know either SSS, SAS, AAA or ASA. That is, Side-Side-Side, Side-Angle-Side, Angle-Angle-Angle or Angle-Side-Angle. If the sides are proportionate and the angles are equal in any of these four patterns, then the triangles are similar.
true
false
OTB
In order for 2 triangles to be congruent, it must be true that each pair of corresponding sides are congruent (equal in length) and each pair of corresponding angles are congruent (equal in size). It is not necessary to prove that all three pairs of sides and all three pairs of angles are congruent. If you prove that all the sides are congruent, then the angles must be congruent, too. This is known as SSS, the side-side-side method of proving congruency. There a four basic ways to prove congruency. They are: 1. SSS (side-side-side) Prove that all three pairs of sides are equal in length. 2. SAS (side-angle-side) Prove that two sides and the angle between them are equal. 3. ASA (angle-side-angle) Prove that two angles and the side between them are equal. 4. AAS (angle-angle-side) Prove that two angles and a side that is NOT between them are equal. Note that you cannot prove that triangles are congruent with AAA or SSA. Note: for right triangles we can use HL. This is a special method that just looks at the hypotenuse and the leg of one triangle and compares it to the hypotenuse of the other. However, if they are both right triangle, the angle between the hypotenuse and the leg is a right angle so this is really just a special case of AAS that we can only use for right triangles.
For any right angle triangle its hypotenuse when squared is equal to the sum of its squared sides.