What the word congruent and circle have in common is that circles have a congruent radii. All of the radii in a single circle is congruent to each other.
Yes
Yes. All radii of the same circle have the same length.
Yes, providing that the radii are all in the same circle
all the angles measure up to be the sameTwo segments that are both congruent to a third segment must be congruent to each otherAll of the radii of a circle are congruent
Yes, all of the radii in a single circle are congruent.
What the word congruent and circle have in common is that circles have a congruent radii. All of the radii in a single circle is congruent to each other.
Yes
Yes. All radii of the same circle have the same length.
All the radii of a circle are of equal length. The radius is the distance from the center of the circle to the out edge. Having equal radii is what defines a circle.
Yes. Congruent circles by definition have the same size, and the radius sufficiently describes the size of a circle.
Yes, providing that the radii are all in the same circle
The answer is false
Circles that have congruent radii. Congruent=coinciding at all points when superimposed (http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/congruent)
all the angles measure up to be the sameTwo segments that are both congruent to a third segment must be congruent to each otherAll of the radii of a circle are congruent
Congruent circles
NO. All the radii of a circle are of exactly the same length. In fact, that is the definition of the locus of a point describing a circle.