It could be an isosceles triangle
Isosceles; a triangle with two congruent (equal) sides.
If its in the form of an isosceles right angle triangle then it will have 2 equal sides.
Someone correct me if I am wrong, but I don't believe triangles can be "equal", only congruent. The measurements can be equal, but not the triangle itself.The triangle congruency postulates and theorems are:Side/Side/Side Postulate - If all three sides of a triangle are congruent to the corresponding parts of another triangle, then the triangles are congruent.Angle/Side/Angle Postulate - If two angles and a side included within those angles of a triangle are congruent to the corresponding parts of another triangle, then the triangles are congruent.Side/Angle/Side Postulate - If two sides and an angle included within those sides of a triangle are congruent to the corresponding parts of another triangle, then the triangles are congruent.Angle/Angle/Side Theorem - If two angles and an unincluded side of a triangle are congruent to the corresponding parts of another triangle, then the triangles are congruent.Hypotenuse/Leg Theorem - (right triangles only) If the hypotenuse and a leg of a right triangle are congruent to the corresponding parts of another triangle, then the triangles are congruent.
How many sides of each triangle and how many angles of each triangle do you have ? If you have two sides and the angle between them, or two angles and the side between them, equal to the same parts of the other triangle, then your triangles are congruent. You don't even have to know what the actual numbers are. If the expressions are equal, then the sides or angles are equal.
It's in the definition of an angle bisector: An angle is formed by two rays with a common endpoint. The angle bisector is a ray or line segment that bisects the angle, creating two congruent angles.and an isoceles triangle:it is a triangle with (at least) two equal sides. This property is equivalent to two angles of the triangle being equal. An isosceles triangle therefore has both two equal sides and two equal angles.
Only if the vertex angle being bisected is between the sides of equal length will the result be two congruent triangles.
The two angle bisectors of a triangle are congruent the those two angles are congruent. The angles are bisected the same meaning that the whole and half angle are the same. For example if they are bisected at the whole angle 50 each, then each half is 25. The bisectors really don't mean anything and all you need is 50 to know it's isosceles. 50 and 50 is 100 and the left over for the last angle is 80 adding to 180. AND overall any 2 congruent angles in a triangle have the same congruent legs making it isosceles.
Isosceles; a triangle with two congruent (equal) sides.
If its in the form of an isosceles right angle triangle then it will have 2 equal sides.
An isosceles triangle has two equal sides and two equal angles
Yes, similar triangles are congruent because in order to be congruent they must first be equal. Which in turn is the definition of a similar triangle. A triangle equal in angle measurements and/or side lengths. So, yes.
A congruent angle can also mean equal angle. So there is no set measurement of a congruent angle. Just the same as the angle it is equal to.
If two angles and the included side of one triangle are equal to the corresponding angles and side of another triangle, then the two triangles are congruent.
Yes, you have two congruent angles in each triangle, one right and one acute so the third angles must be equal also.
Someone correct me if I am wrong, but I don't believe triangles can be "equal", only congruent. The measurements can be equal, but not the triangle itself.The triangle congruency postulates and theorems are:Side/Side/Side Postulate - If all three sides of a triangle are congruent to the corresponding parts of another triangle, then the triangles are congruent.Angle/Side/Angle Postulate - If two angles and a side included within those angles of a triangle are congruent to the corresponding parts of another triangle, then the triangles are congruent.Side/Angle/Side Postulate - If two sides and an angle included within those sides of a triangle are congruent to the corresponding parts of another triangle, then the triangles are congruent.Angle/Angle/Side Theorem - If two angles and an unincluded side of a triangle are congruent to the corresponding parts of another triangle, then the triangles are congruent.Hypotenuse/Leg Theorem - (right triangles only) If the hypotenuse and a leg of a right triangle are congruent to the corresponding parts of another triangle, then the triangles are congruent.
No. The triangle is an isosceles triangle and the angle between the equal sides can be any angle greater than 0° and less than 180°.
ASA stands for "angle, side, angle" and means that we have two triangles where we know two angles and the included side are equal. If two angles and the included side of one triangle are equal to the corresponding angles and side of another triangle, the triangles are congruent.