Because parallelograms include rhombuses, squares, and rectangles, any triangle would be one of those split in two.
If you are thinking about a parallelogram that cannot be classified any more specifically, then it would be a scalene triangle.
The answer depends on how the parallelogram in the triangle is constructed.
you do it because the triangle is half the size of the parallelogram
No, a triangle is not a a parallelogram
If the heights and bases are the same, then the triangle is half the area of the parallelogram.
Yes, a parallelogram and a triangle can have the same base and area. If a triangle and a parallelogram share the same base and height, the area of the triangle will be half that of the parallelogram. However, if the triangle is formed by using one of the sides of the parallelogram as its base and the height is the same, they can have the same area. Thus, they can have the same base but will only have equal areas under specific conditions.
Parallelogram, rhombus and triangle
No. A triangle has 3 sides, and a parallelogram has 4 sides. No kind of triangle can be a parallelogram, and no kind of parallelogram can be a triangle. The question is a lot like asking: Can this particular model of Toyota be a Ford ?
A parallelogram can be split into two congruent triangles known as "parallelogram halves" or "diagonally opposite triangles." These triangles share a common base, which is half the length of the parallelogram's diagonal. The height of each triangle is the perpendicular distance between the base and the opposite side of the parallelogram.
A parallelogram is two triangle together.
I don't know about the relation in the perimeters of a triangle and a parallelogram but if a triangle is on the same base on which the parallelogram is and the triangle is between the same parallel lines of the parallelogram, then the area of the triangle will be half the area of the parallelogram. That is, area of a triangle = 1/2 area of a parallelogram if the triangle is on the same base and between the same parallel lines.
The answer depends on how the parallelogram in the triangle is constructed.
you do it because the triangle is half the size of the parallelogram
NO!!!! A parallelogram has 4(four) sides. A Triangle has 3(three) sides.
No, because a triangle has no parallel sides.
No, a triangle is not a a parallelogram
If the heights and bases are the same, then the triangle is half the area of the parallelogram.
No. Every triangle has 3 sides, and every figure with 3 sides is a triangle. So no triangle can be a parallelogram. Every parallelogram has 4 sides, and every figure with 4 sides is a quadrilateral. So no parallelogram can be a triangle.