No, An equilateral triangle has 3 congruent angles, an isosceles triangle has 2 congruent angles, a scalene triangle has no congruent angles.
if it has one congruent side it is a scalene triangle. if it has a pair of congruent sides it is an isosceles triangle. if all the sides are congruent it is an equilateral triangle
here is your answer: the triangle is congruent to BCR
If a triangle is congruent to another triangle, they are exactly the same. therefore, a congruent triangle can look like anything.
................ scalene triangle ................ =)
triangle
It is a regular polygon such as a square, an equilateral triangle or a regular 5 sided pentagon
No, An equilateral triangle has 3 congruent angles, an isosceles triangle has 2 congruent angles, a scalene triangle has no congruent angles.
No, similar pentagons (or any polygon for that matter) must have corresponding congruent angles and all sides must be proportional to its corresponding sides. For example, if a square with a triangle on it is a pentagon, then a regular pentagon would not be similar to it (because corresponding angles are not congruent).
if it has one congruent side it is a scalene triangle. if it has a pair of congruent sides it is an isosceles triangle. if all the sides are congruent it is an equilateral triangle
here is your answer: the triangle is congruent to BCR
If a triangle is congruent to another triangle, they are exactly the same. therefore, a congruent triangle can look like anything.
................ scalene triangle ................ =)
Scalene Triangle- a triangle with no congruent sides Isosceles Triangle- a triangle with two congruent sides Equilateral Triangle- a triangle with three congruent sides
a congruent triangle?
No isosceles triangle in the world is congruent to any equilateral triangle. No equilateral triangle in the world is congruent to any right triangle.
A pentagon and a triangle are both polygons. There are three triangles in a pentagon. Both a triangle and a pentagon have exterior angles that add up to 360 degrees