Each of the 3 interior angles of an equilateral triangle measures 60 degrees
equilateral triangle all the same angle too
Not too sure of the question but an equilateral triangle has 3 equal sides, 3 equal interior angles of 60 degrees and 3 equal exterior angles of 120 degrees
Triangle? Well, an equilateral triangle is equiangular meaning all angles are equal. The angles are 60 degrees which sum up too 180 degrees. :-)
A triangle CAN fit that description, if it is "equilateral" (equi means equal, later- means sides, so "equilateral" means all sides are equal). If all sides are equal then all angles will be, too.
An equilateral triangle is a special type of isosceles triangle. It has two equal sides, which makes it isosceles; its third side is also equal, making it equilateral, too.
Each of the 3 interior angles of an equilateral triangle measures 60 degrees
That's the "equilateral" triangle. "Equilateral" means "equal-sided", and in fact, it's not necessary to state both conditions. If the sides are equal, then the angles are equal too, and vice versa.
the one with equal sides the whole way around. they also have equal angles too.
equilateral triangle all the same angle too
Not too sure of the question but an equilateral triangle has 3 equal sides, 3 equal interior angles of 60 degrees and 3 equal exterior angles of 120 degrees
Triangle? Well, an equilateral triangle is equiangular meaning all angles are equal. The angles are 60 degrees which sum up too 180 degrees. :-)
A triangle CAN fit that description, if it is "equilateral" (equi means equal, later- means sides, so "equilateral" means all sides are equal). If all sides are equal then all angles will be, too.
An equilateral triangle has 3 sides that are all the same. In addition, all angles are equal, too.
yes and have 2 equal side too
Okay. What do you want to know? No information can be drawn from that statement. No information can be given to you because you are too ambiguous. All sides congruent, by definition, makes the shape equilateral. But there is no guarantee that it is equiangular and therefore it isn't necessarily a regular polygon. Hexagons have six sides. If all sides are congruent then the perimeter is six times the length of one side and the length of one side is one-sixth the length of the perimeter. Aside from general size, an equilateral hexagon can come in only two unique types: concave and convex. For any given side-length/perimeter, there are only two possible equilateral hexagons. The area of an equiangular equilateral hexagon is 3/2*(length of one side)*(length of one side)*(square root of 3).
Isosceles triangles usually have two congruent sides, but the rule is that they actually have at least two. That means that they can also have a third congruent side. That means they are both equilateral and isosceles*, which I personally think is way too confusing, but that's how it works.Example: A triangle has angles of 60 degrees, 60 degrees, and 60 degrees. It is both isosceles and equilateral.*I think that equilateral triangles are actually a type of isosceles triangle, so that if you're asked on a math test, for example, whether a triangle is scalene, isosceles, or equilateral, you'd say equilateral.No, Isosceles is two equal sides, although an equilateral triangle CAN be an isosceles triangle. And Angles of an isosceles triangle are not known (given) - simply two equal sides.Three, like every other triangle.