The length of the sides has nothing to do with the measure of the angle.
the area referrers to the length and circumference of the triangle it self. The measurement matters to find the acute angle it self as a angle not a triangle
It is the ratio of the length of the adjacent side to that of the hypotenuse.
1 acute angle = 1 acute angle
An equilateral triangle which has three sides of equal length also has three equal angles. Each angle measures 60° and is therefore an acute angle as it is less than 90° .
The length of the sides has nothing to do with the measure of the angle.
the area referrers to the length and circumference of the triangle it self. The measurement matters to find the acute angle it self as a angle not a triangle
sin θ : 1 = the length of opposite side to angle θ : the length of the hypotenuse
It is the ratio of the length of the adjacent side to that of the hypotenuse.
-- Like every triangle, a right triangle has three interior angles.-- Unlike any other triangle, one of the angles in a right triangle is a right angle.The other two are both acute angles.-- One acute angle is the angle whose cosine is length of one leg / length of hypotenuse-- Other acute angle is the angle whose sine is length of the same leg / length of the hypotenuse-- The length of the hypotenuse is the square root of [ (length of one leg)2 + length of other leg)2 ]
A rhombus (or parallelogram).
1 acute angle = 1 acute angle
That is an acute angle. An obtuse angle is not acute.
An acute angle
An equilateral triangle which has three sides of equal length also has three equal angles. Each angle measures 60° and is therefore an acute angle as it is less than 90° .
acute angle
There is no such thing as an equilateral angle. Equilateral refers to a shape whose sides are of equal length. The lengths of the sides of an angle are indeterminate.