bh=ws
Without seeing the picture, I can't tell what's already known to be congruent, so there's no way I can figure out what 'else' is needed.
Every triangle must have either 2 or else 3 acute angles. The least possible is 2.
I believe you need 2 pieces of data (either an angle or another length) before you can calculate anything about the triangle. Anyone else can correct me if I'm wrong.
2/8 equals 1/4 which is 0.25 or 25%. Anything else? ;D
No way to answer this until we know either the value of 'X', or else something about the drawing.
Nicki Minaj
D). Eg = hj
Without seeing the picture, I can't tell what's already known to be congruent, so there's no way I can figure out what 'else' is needed.
That depends on which sides have not been proven congruent yet.
"What else" implies there is already something that is congruent. But since you have not bothered to share that crucial bit of information, I cannot provide a more useful answer.
"Congruent" means "same shape and size as the other one". So one thing all by itself is never congruent. It needs something else to be congruent with. An isosceles triangle is never congruent to a scalene triangle, sometimes congruent to any other kind of triangle, and always congruent to another isosceles triangle that's congruent to the first one.
congruent means that all the sides are the same length. the sides of a square have to be the same length or else it would be a rectangle. Not all triangles are congruent though. there are other types of triangles unlike the square, where there is only one type.
it is impossible* * * * * Although it is impossible to have a triangle with no sides or angles congruent to anything else in the 2-d world, I suggest that the answer to this question is a scalene triangle.
AAS is equal to angle-angle-side, and is descriptive of a triangle. JKL and MNO would be the sides and angles of a triangle. The two sides must be congruent to the opposite angle.
That all sides and angles are also equal.
Congruent means "equals" or "the same." Basically if you take a shape and flip it over or mirror it, or do anything else that copies the original in size and shape, it is congruent to the original. An obtuse triangle has one angle greater than 90* and an acute triangle has three angles that are less than 90*. No matter how you turn or flip or mirror those triangles, acute will never be obtuse and obtuse will never be acute. But if you take an acute triangle, and flip it upside down, it is still acute, and still has the same proportions, and therefore is congruent to the original.
congruent - SSSAnswer by Arteom, Friday December 10, 2010