It depends on isosceles WHAT? There are isosceles triangles, isosceles trapezia, for example.
You look at the lengths of the sided of the triangle. If the two lengths are same, the triangle is an isosceles triangle. If all the lengths are same, the triangle is an equilateral triangle. If none of the lengths are same, the triangle is a scalene triangle.
A bow-tie type connection of 2 triangles.
The next of an octahedron looks like a series of 8 triangles.
It will look like one half of a 12 x 12 square cut through diagonally. The hypotenuse angle will be 45 degrees.
It depends on isosceles WHAT? There are isosceles triangles, isosceles trapezia, for example.
Look at that scalene triangle! There are many types of Scalene Triangles.
There are infinitely many types of triangles, and they can be classified according to their angles or sides (or both). Equilateral (equiangular triangles): All sides equal, all angles 60 degrees. Obtuse angled isosceles triangles: Two sides equal; one angle > 90deg. Right angled isosceles triangles: Two sides equal; angles of 90, 45, 45 degrees. Other isosceles triangle: Two sides equal; angles of 180-2x, x, x degrees. Obtuse angled scalene triangles: All sides unequal, one angle > 90 degrees. Right angled scalene triangles: All sides unequal, one angle = 90 degrees. Acute angled scalene triangles: All sides unequal, all angles < 90 degrees.
You can make a <> and a [] out of two isosceles triangles (I wanted you to visualize the shapes so you can really know what they look like in case you didn't know).
There is alot of triangles. Triangles are three sided two slanted lines connected with a straight line on the bottom. The types of triangles are is the Isosceles, Acute, Right (angle), Left (angle), Equilateral, Obtuse, and Scalene triangles.A triangle has equilateral sides all around that are the same length and same angles.
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
You look at the lengths of the sided of the triangle. If the two lengths are same, the triangle is an isosceles triangle. If all the lengths are same, the triangle is an equilateral triangle. If none of the lengths are same, the triangle is a scalene triangle.
If a sail is pulled back, it could look like a scalene triangle.
I believe a scalene triangle CAN have a right angle. Def of scalene tri: a triangle with no equal sides, and no equal angles. A triangle with angles of 90, 29, and 61. Sides of 15.0, 27.0, and 30.9 this satisfies the definition. If you look at it the other way: can a right triangle be non-scalene, and there is only one possibility: the isosceles right triangle (45°, 45°, 90°), with sides (square_root(2), 1, and 1). It's not possible for an equilateral triangle to have a right angle. So all other right triangles are scalene (but not all scalene triangles are right triangles).
Three unequal sides.
It looks like an isosceles triangle with its top cut off by a line parallel to its base.
The area of a triangle is half the base times the height, so obviously the areas will be the same if these figures are identical, but I doubt it is possible to have such correspondence between any two of the triangles you mention! Consider mapping a right triangle to an isosceles - I can't keep the altitude constant.