Congruent sides are two (or more) sides of a shape that have the same measure.
Yes, by definition.
Since by definition corresponding sides of congruent shapes have the same length, the answer is 1.
Two triangles are congruent if their corresponding sides are equal in length, and their corresponding angles are equal in measure.
No, a regular pentagon cannot have congruent sides but non-congruent angles. By definition, a regular pentagon has all sides of equal length and all interior angles equal. In a regular pentagon, the angles are each 108 degrees, ensuring that both the sides and angles are congruent. If the sides are congruent but the angles are not, it would be classified as an irregular pentagon instead.
No. If you made a parallelogram with congruent sides it wouldn't necessarily have congruent angles. A square has to have congruent angles as well as congruent sides.
Congruent Segments (sides) : Segments that are of the same lengths.
The Definition of Congruent Figures (which is a proof) says that if two figures have corresponding sides congruent and corresponding angles congruent, then the figures are to be congruent.
Two figures are only congruent if their corresponding angles and sides are equal.So yes, by the definition of congruency.cylinder
An impossibility. By definition a quadrilateral with 4 congruent sides must have congruent adjacent angles.
Yes, by definition.
Rhombus
Since by definition corresponding sides of congruent shapes have the same length, the answer is 1.
No, definition of rhombus is having four congruent sides, but that means its angles don't have to be all congruent. A square is having four congruent sides and angles.
yes because a square is, by definition, a shape having 4 ninety degree angles, and four congruent sides
Yes, by definition.
A three sided closed figure. It is one of the basic shapes of geometry.
No "if" is necessary in this case. All angles of a rectangle are congruent, by definition. Also, there is no "angle opposite a side" in a rectangle.