The 2 sides perpendicular to its right angle
Triangles don't have legs, legs implies the triangle's corners are perpendicular to a surface, this chnages the shape of the triangle into a origami shaped object like a small table, which can't exsist fully in 2D.
The perpendicular bisectors only intersect on the triangle when it is an isosceles right triangle.
No but a right angle triangle has perpendicular lines that meet at 90 degrees
Yes a right angle triangle has perpendicular lines that form 90 degrees.
The perpendicular sides of a right triangle are its legs. The remaining side is the hypotenuse.
They are perpendicular.
The 2 sides perpendicular to its right angle
Perpendicular means meeting at a right angle. A right triangle has 2 sides that are perpendicular, so it has 1 pair of sides that are perpendicular They are known as the "legs" of the right triangle.
Triangles don't have legs, legs implies the triangle's corners are perpendicular to a surface, this chnages the shape of the triangle into a origami shaped object like a small table, which can't exsist fully in 2D.
The only requirement for an isosceles triangle is that two sides be the same length and one be different. It is possible for an isosceles triangle to have two perpendicular legs. It would be right and isosceles.
I do believe you mean RIGHT triangle when you said perpendicular triangle. A right triangle has two legs and a hypotenuse. The area of a right triangle is 1/2 * (first leg) * (second leg) How do you determine which ones are the legs and which one is the hypotenuse? The hypotenuse is ALWAYS the largest number. So, choose the 2 smallest numbers.
No. a equilateral triangle does not have perpendicular sides.
No. a equilateral triangle does not have perpendicular sides.
A triangle has three sides. The two sides that are perpendicular are called legs and the diagonal side is called the hypotenuse. Whichever side is horizontal (usually one of the legs) is also called the base.
The Right Triangle. Perpendicular lines make a right angle.
Is a line that bisects a side of a triangle and is perpendicular to that side.