No congruent sides is a scalene, two congruent sides is an isosceles triangle, three is an equilateral.
Yes such as an isosceles triangle
A scalene triangle has no congruent sides, they are all different lengths.
That's true.In a right triangle, the square of one side must be the sum of the squares of the other two sides.So it's impossible for all three sides to be equal.
An isosceles triangle has at exactly two congruent sides, while an equilateral triangle has all equal sides.--Korean Swag
An acute triangle may have three, two, or no congruent sides.
Equilateral triangle = All sides congruent Scalene triangle = No sides congruent Isosceles triangle = At LEAST two sides congruent Right triangle = Triangle with one right angle Obtuse triangle = Triangle with ONE obtuse angle Acute triangle = Triangle with ALL acute angles
A scalene triangle can have an obtuse angle and two different acute angles.
A triangle with two congruent sides is an isoscelestriangle. But an equilateral triangle has two congruent sides. (It actually has three congruent sides.) And isosceles triangle is generally described as a triangle with exactly two congruent sides.
By Definition, a triangle with two Congruent Sides is an Isosceles Triangle. For ALL angles to be Acute, that is, LESS than 90o , the two opposite angles must be greater than 45o. Remember that the SUM of the angles in a Triangle must equal 180o.
A triangle which has no two sides congruent is called a Scalene Triangle.
An obtuse triangle is a type of triangle that has no congruent sides. Basically none of its sides are the same size.
An isosceles triangle has two congruent sides.
Scalene Triangle- a triangle with no congruent sides Isosceles Triangle- a triangle with two congruent sides Equilateral Triangle- a triangle with three congruent sides
No congruent sides is a scalene, two congruent sides is an isosceles triangle, three is an equilateral.
A triangle with two congruent sides is an isosceles triangle, and a triangle with three congruent sides is an equilateral triangle.
a congruent triangle?