Isosceles, equilateral and Scalene. An Isosceles Triangle has 2 identical angles and 1 different angle. A Scalene triangle has 3 different angles and An equilateral triangle's angles are all the same ie 60 degrees.
And Equilateral Triangle has three EQUAL sides. Basically just your ordinary triangle. The Isosceles triangle usually has TWO equal sides, and one odd side,( not the same size in degrees.) A scalene Triangle also has TWO of the same sides, BUT- Its degrees are usually always different. I'll show you some examples. The first example below is an isosceles Triangle. The 2nd is the Scalene Triangle... Hope I helped...
Equilateral: All angles the same Isosceles: Two angles the same Scalene: No angles the same
equilateral triangle- all sides the same length isosceles triangle- 2 sides the same length scalene triangle- no sides the same length
An isosceles triangle has two sides that are the same length. A scalene triangle does not have any sides that are the same length.
No. An equilateral triangle is also isosceles, but isosceles is not scalene.
You look at the lengths of the sided of the triangle. If the two lengths are same, the triangle is an isosceles triangle. If all the lengths are same, the triangle is an equilateral triangle. If none of the lengths are same, the triangle is a scalene triangle.
Use the distance formula to calculate the distances between the three vertices. If they are all different, the triangle is scalene, if only two are the same, the triangle is isosceles, and if they are all the same, the triangle is equilateral.
isosceles - 2 sides of the triangle are the same length scalene - no sides are the same length equilateral- all sides are the same length
Isosceles, equilateral and Scalene. An Isosceles Triangle has 2 identical angles and 1 different angle. A Scalene triangle has 3 different angles and An equilateral triangle's angles are all the same ie 60 degrees.
A scalene triangle has three sides that are all different. An isosceles triangle has two sides that are the same An equilateral triangle has all three sides the same.
yes a scalene triangle is a isosceles triangle.* * * * *No. A scalene triangle is not an isosceles triangle. The sides of a scalene triangle must all be of different lengths. In an isosceles triangle two of the sides must be the same length. If all three sides are different (scalene) then two cannot be the same (isosceles).
yes a scalene triangle is a isosceles triangle.* * * * *No. A scalene triangle is not an isosceles triangle. The sides of a scalene triangle must all be of different lengths. In an isosceles triangle two of the sides must be the same length. If all three sides are different (scalene) then two cannot be the same (isosceles).
And Equilateral Triangle has three EQUAL sides. Basically just your ordinary triangle. The Isosceles triangle usually has TWO equal sides, and one odd side,( not the same size in degrees.) A scalene Triangle also has TWO of the same sides, BUT- Its degrees are usually always different. I'll show you some examples. The first example below is an isosceles Triangle. The 2nd is the Scalene Triangle... Hope I helped...
Equilateral: All angles the same Isosceles: Two angles the same Scalene: No angles the same
equilateral triangle- all sides the same length isosceles triangle- 2 sides the same length scalene triangle- no sides the same length
You must have more information about the triangle. If you know the angles, and two of them are equal, it is an isosceles triangle. If all three of the angles are sixty-degrees, it is an equilateral triangle. If none of the angles are the same, it is a scalene triangle. If one of the angles is ninety degrees, it is a right triangle (right triangles may also be scalene or isosceles). If you know the side lengths and two of them are equal, it is isosceles. If they are all equal, it is equilateral. If none of them are equal, it is scalene. A scalene or isosceles triangle may also be a right triangle, which you could determine from side lengths using the pythagorean theorem.