Equilateral.
The point where the altitudes of a triangle meet is called the orthocenter. This point can be located inside the triangle for acute triangles, on the triangle for right triangles, and outside the triangle for obtuse triangles. The orthocenter is one of the four main points of concurrency in a triangle, alongside the centroid, circumcenter, and incenter.
No. A trinagle does not require four points, three are sufficient. And any three points, if they are not colinear, must be coplanar.
An isosceles triangle has two sides of equal length and the angles opposite those sides are also equal. The term "coplanar" means that four points lie on the same plane. In the context of an isosceles triangle, the three vertices of the triangle and any additional point (such as the midpoint of the base) can indeed be coplanar. Therefore, it is true that four points can be coplanar in relation to an isosceles triangle.
yes if it is a square of recatgle
A rhombus has four sides, a triangle has three.A rhombus has four sides, a triangle has three.A rhombus has four sides, a triangle has three.A rhombus has four sides, a triangle has three.
The point where the altitudes of a triangle meet is called the orthocenter. This point can be located inside the triangle for acute triangles, on the triangle for right triangles, and outside the triangle for obtuse triangles. The orthocenter is one of the four main points of concurrency in a triangle, alongside the centroid, circumcenter, and incenter.
The answer depends on what point of concurrency you are referring to. There are four segments you could be talking about in triangles. They intersect in different places in different triangles. Medians--segments from a vertex to the midpoint of the opposite side. In acute, right and obtuse triangles, the point of concurrency of the medians (centroid) is inside the triangle. Altitudes--perpendicular segments from a vertex to a line containing the opposite side. In an acute triangle, the point of concurrency of the altitudes (orthocenter) is inside the triangle, in a right triangle it is on the triangle and in an obtuse triangle it is outside the triangle. Perpendicular bisectors of sides--segments perpendicular to each side of the triangle that bisect each side. In an acute triangle, the point of concurrency of the perpendicular bisectors (circumcenter) is inside the triangle, in a right triangle it is on the triangle and in an obtuse triangle it is outside the triangle. Angle bisectors--segments from a vertex to the opposite side that bisect the angles at the vertices. In acute, right and obtuse triangles, the point of concurrency of the angle bisectors (incenter) is inside the triangle.
Circumcenter, incenter, orthocenter and centroid.
No. A trinagle does not require four points, three are sufficient. And any three points, if they are not colinear, must be coplanar.
An isosceles triangle has two sides of equal length and the angles opposite those sides are also equal. The term "coplanar" means that four points lie on the same plane. In the context of an isosceles triangle, the three vertices of the triangle and any additional point (such as the midpoint of the base) can indeed be coplanar. Therefore, it is true that four points can be coplanar in relation to an isosceles triangle.
A quadrilateral shape has four sides and four internal angles. A triangle has three sides and three internal angles. Therefore there is no such thing as a quadrilateral triangle.
yes if it is a square of recatgle
No. For example, consider the vertices of a tetrahedron (triangle-based pyramid).
A rhombus has four sides, a triangle has three.A rhombus has four sides, a triangle has three.A rhombus has four sides, a triangle has three.A rhombus has four sides, a triangle has three.
The Four Points by Sheraton have locations in many cities around the world and are often located in or near the CBD of the city. It is difficult to say where exactly they are but they are in most major cities.
A shape that consists of 4 points, 2 rays, and 1 right angle is a right triangle. In this triangle, the two rays represent the legs that form the right angle while the third side connects the endpoints of these rays. The four points can be the three vertices of the triangle and an additional point, such as the right angle's vertex. Thus, the answer is a right triangle.
No, a triangle and a rectangle are not congruent. Congruent means exactly the same size and shape. A triangle has 3 sides while a rectangle has four. A triangle's three angles always add up to 180 degrees where as a rectangle's four right angles always equal 360 degrees. They are not congruent- not even similar- at all.