Equiangular just means that all of the angles are the same, but the term is most often used to describe an equilateral triangle.
An irregular polygon
No, an equilateral triangle has to be equiangular, but an equiangular triangle does NOT have to be equilateral
An equiangular polygon is a polygon in which all interior angles are equal in measure. This means that regardless of the number of sides, each angle maintains the same degree, making it a regular shape in terms of angular measurement. While all regular polygons are equiangular, not all equiangular polygons are regular, as they can have sides of different lengths. Examples of equiangular polygons include rectangles and squares, but also more complex shapes like certain types of stars.
Shapes that are not always equiangular include rectangles, trapezoids, and rhombuses. While rectangles are always equiangular (having four right angles), trapezoids can vary based on their specific type and do not necessarily have equal angles. Rhombuses have equal sides but can have varying angles, making them non-equiangular in certain cases. Thus, the angle properties depend on the specific characteristics of the shape.
A regular heptagon is a polygon with seven equilateral sides. The shape must also be equiangular and convex.
A regular polygon
An irregular polygon
SQUARE
square
An equilateral and equiangular polygon.
a square. or an equilateral triangle
Not all are. Not only is it a concave shape, but the interior angles can vary. For a polygon to be regular, it must be equilateral and equiangular.
It is called a square. The clues: equilateral means all sides are of equal length; equiangular means all angles are of the same degrees; quadrilateral means the shape has four sides. The only shape that qualifies is a rectangle [includes squares.]
No, an equilateral triangle has to be equiangular, but an equiangular triangle does NOT have to be equilateral
Having equal angles; as, an equiangular figure; a square is equiangular.
A shape where all the sides are equal and all the angles are equal. If all sides are equal but angles or not, it is equilateral. If it is vice versa, it is equiangular.
An equiangular polygon is a polygon in which all interior angles are equal in measure. This means that regardless of the number of sides, each angle maintains the same degree, making it a regular shape in terms of angular measurement. While all regular polygons are equiangular, not all equiangular polygons are regular, as they can have sides of different lengths. Examples of equiangular polygons include rectangles and squares, but also more complex shapes like certain types of stars.