Absolutely. Any two congruent right triangles will form a rectangle, and if the right triangles are isosceles right triangles, they will form a square.
If the triangles are congruent then it is a triangular-based prism.
Another rectangle congruent means the same siz and shape
You could prove two triangles are congruent by measuring each side of both triangles, and all three angles of each triangle. If the lengths of the sides are the same, and so are the angles, then the triangles are congruent... if not, then the triangles are not congruent. If the triangles have the exact same size and shape then they are congruent.
triangular pyramid
The answer would be i think a rectangular pyramid. Not sure tho.
A square and rectangle both have congruent triangles in them.
How about a square or a rectangle
trueImproved Answer:-It is false because the triangles could be similar in shape but not in size
A rhombus
rectangle
A Rectangle
It is a rectangle
A square. A rectangle.
It could look like a child's drawing of a house: a rectangular shape with a triangular roof on top.The vertical sides of the rectangle, and the sloped sides of the roof would be the two congruent pairs of sides.The angles at the base of the rectangle and at the base of the roof would be the two pairs of congruent angles.It could look like a child's drawing of a house: a rectangular shape with a triangular roof on top.The vertical sides of the rectangle, and the sloped sides of the roof would be the two congruent pairs of sides.The angles at the base of the rectangle and at the base of the roof would be the two pairs of congruent angles.It could look like a child's drawing of a house: a rectangular shape with a triangular roof on top.The vertical sides of the rectangle, and the sloped sides of the roof would be the two congruent pairs of sides.The angles at the base of the rectangle and at the base of the roof would be the two pairs of congruent angles.It could look like a child's drawing of a house: a rectangular shape with a triangular roof on top.The vertical sides of the rectangle, and the sloped sides of the roof would be the two congruent pairs of sides.The angles at the base of the rectangle and at the base of the roof would be the two pairs of congruent angles.
This is a parallelogram. The first requirement is 2 pairs of congruent sides where the congruent sides are not adjacent. This is like a rectangle (excluding a square) that has two pairs of congruent sides where the congruent sides are not adjacent. But the angles are not all congruent (as set in the question) which pushes the shape into the "next less regular" shape, the parallelogram. The angles will not all be congruent, but it will have 2 pairs of congruent angles. There is no way to avoid the 2 pairs of congruent angles because of the requirement that the shape must have 2 pairs of congruent sides (the first requirement).
This is a rectangle.