Each of the base angles measure 71 degrees
It measures humidity
Validity is the extent to which a measurement tool actually measures what we wish to measure.
No, it measures degrees. Longitude can measure time, but not from the equator but from the prime meridian
No. An anemometer measures wind speed. A ceilometer measures the height of cloud base.
The point at which there establishes one to one correspondence between two entities is ideally the 'congruent point'. ex: Two line segments are congruent if they have the same length, two angles are congruent if they have the same measure, two polygons are congruent if all the corresponding sides and angles are equal.
(180 - 38)/2 = 71 degrees (base angles of an isosceles triangle are congruent).
congruent/equivalent in measure
There is no exact measure, but 2 sides are congruent which means that 2 angles are congruent.
(180 - 36) / 2 = 72
45°
A scalene triangle. In a scalene triangle, there are no congruent sides or angles. In an isosceles triangle, at least two congruent sides and angles. In an equilateral triangle, all three sides and angles are congruent, with angles that always measure sixty degrees. Note: an equilateral triangle also classifies as an isosceles triangle, as it meets the definition of an isosceles triangle mentioned above.
63
No. The only requirement for a triangle to be a 45-45-90 triangle is for it to have at least two congruent sides/angles. The measure of the two congruent angles can be anything.
Well, I know the other angles are 71. But idk how to get the base. cause inside, a triangle must be 180 degrees. so you take 180 - 38, and get 142. then you take 142 divided by two, because in an isosceles triangle two sides are congruent. then you get 71. The legs are 21, but what's the base?!
Length of sides is irrelevant. Angles are ((180 - 40)/2) ie 70o
It is: 180-(2*53) = 74 degrees.(Note that the side length doesn't matter.)
An Isosceles Triangle