Only if the vertex angle being bisected is between the sides of equal length will the result be two congruent triangles.
If two sides and the included angle of one of one of the triangle are congruent to two sides and the included angle of another triangle, then the triangles are congruent.
A triangle with two congruent sides is isosceles. A triangle with an angle of 104 degrees is obtuse. So you would have an obtuse isosceles triangle.
It means that if two triangles have two sides with the lengths of the corresponding sides that are equal (congruent) and the angles between between the two sides congruent, then the triangles are congruent (i.e., the three corresponding lengths of sides and three corresponding angles are all congruent). For example, if you know that triangle one has sides of length 1 and 2 and the angle between the two sides is 60 degrees and that triangle two has sides of length 1 and 2 and the angle between the two sides is 60 degrees, this theorem says that the triangles are congruent, so the length of third side of both triangles is the same and the measure of the other two angles in triangle one is the ame as the measure of the other two angles in triangle two.
that depends on the triangle. if the triangle has no two sides that are the same length, then it is called a scalene triangle and it has no lines of symmetry. if the triangle has two sides that are the same length, the triangle has one line of symmetry, starting at the angle where the two same length sides meet, and ending at the center of the opposite side. if all three sides are the same length, the triangle has three lines of symmetry, between any angle an the center of the opposite side.
draw triangle that has sides of lengths 3.6cm and 5.2cm and a 42* angle between these two sides
Not always because the largest angle of a right angle triangle is between its smallest sides which measures 90 degrees
No. The angles must be an included angle, between the sides to guarantee congruence. For an example. imagine a triangle with two equal sides and a 60 degree angle between them and another triangle with the same two equal sides and a 120 degree angle between them.
The third wheel
It is an isosceles right angle triangle that has two equal sides which has two 45 degree angles and a 90 degree angle.
An isosceles triangle is a triangle with two equal sides and two equal angles. The two equal sides are called the legs, and the angle between them is called the vertex angle. The two other angles in an isosceles triangle are equal and are called the base angles.
There is no answer to this question. The angle between the two sides needs to be known.
a triangle with two sides the same length and no right angle
Only if the vertex angle being bisected is between the sides of equal length will the result be two congruent triangles.
You need to know the angle between them.
No TRIangle can have two equal sides it would be an angle. A triangle with 2 equal sides is called an isosceles triangle.
If two sides and the included angle of one of one of the triangle are congruent to two sides and the included angle of another triangle, then the triangles are congruent.