It's in the definition of an angle bisector: An angle is formed by two rays with a common endpoint. The angle bisector is a ray or line segment that bisects the angle, creating two congruent angles.
and an isoceles triangle:
it is a triangle with (at least) two equal sides. This property is equivalent to two angles of the triangle being equal. An isosceles triangle therefore has both two equal sides and two equal angles.
An isosceles or an equilateral triangle perhaps?
No, it's not true.
Maybe they are bisector, median, altitude and the middle perpendicular. (I hope I put it in English right :)
Yes in equilateral triangle.
Yes, it can.
An isosceles or an equilateral triangle perhaps?
No, it's not true.
It is the median which divides the side which is not one of the equal sides.
The altitude is the segment from an angle of a triangle to the side opposite of the angle which is intersected perpendicularly by the altitude., the angle bisector cuts an angle into two congruent angles, and a median forms two congruent line segments.
Maybe they are bisector, median, altitude and the middle perpendicular. (I hope I put it in English right :)
Yes. If you have an isosceles triangle standing up on the unequal side, thenthe line segment from the top vertex perpendicular to the base is all of these.
No. The angle bisector is a line. Where the three lines meet is the median. In an equilateral triangle the INTERSECTION of the angle bisectors is the median.
Yes in equilateral triangle.
Yes, it can.
BAD = BCD is the answer i just did it
median intersect each other at a point inside triangle and altitude intrsect eachother at apoint outside triangle
Yes