Introvert or Extrovert Quiz
Q&A for How to Construct an Isosceles Triangle
Coming soon
Search
-
QuestionHow would you construct an isosceles right triangle if only given the hypotenuse?Community AnswerIf you know the length of the hypotenuse, you can find the length of the other two sides of the triangle using the Pythagorean theorem (a^2 + b^2 = c^2). However, since this is an isosceles triangle, the two sides will be the same length, so you will simplify the Pythagorean formula to x^2 + x^2 = c^2, or 2x^2 = c^2. For example, if the hypotenuse is 12 cm, the formula will be 2x^2 = 12^2: 2x^2 = 12^2 2x^2 = 144 2x^2/2 = 144/2 x^2 = 72 sqrt*x^2 = sqrt*72 x = 8.48. Since every triangle has 180 degrees, if it is a right triangle, the angle measurements are 90-45-45. So the triangle will have a hypotenuse of 12, two side lengths of about 8.5 cm, and two 45 degree angles.
-
QuestionHow do I construct a right isosceles triangle given perimeter?Top AnswererYou don't have enough information to do that.
-
QuestionIf the base is 60 and the base angle is 45, what is the length of the two sides?Top AnswererBoth base angles are 45°. Therefore the third angle is 90°. Drop an altitude from the 90° angle to the base. The altitude bisects the 90° angle. It also bisects the base and is perpendicular to it. The altitude forms two smaller isosceles right triangles, each of which has two 45° angles and two sides with lengths of 30 (half the base). Thus, each 45° angle in each smaller right triangle has an opposite side and an adjacent side of length 30 and a hypotenuse of x (the length you're trying to find). The sine (and cosine) of each 45° angle is 0.707. Therefore, 0.707 = 30 / x. x = 30 / 0.707 = 42.4. That's the length of each of the two equal sides of the big triangle.
-
QuestionHow do I construct triangle AB = 10 cm, AC = 5 cm, BC = 8 cm?Top AnswererDraw straight line segment AB 10 cm in length. Using a compass, from point A draw an arc of 5 cm radius. From point B draw an arc of 8 cm radius. The intersection of the two arcs is point C. Draw straight lines from A to C and from B to C. You have your triangle.
-
QuestionHow do I construct a right-angled triangle abc such that ab = bc and ac = 10 cm?Top AnswererDraw a line segment 10 cm in length, and label it AC. Then choose any convenient length for AB and BC, and proceed as shown in Method 1.
-
QuestionHow do I construct an isosceles triangle ABC in which AB is equal to AC and angle ABC is equal to 75?Top AnswererUse a protractor to draw a 75° angle with vertex point A. Mark an equal distance from the vertex along both rays of the angle (at points B and C). Draw a line connecting B and C. That forms an isosceles triangle.
-
QuestionHow do I construct an isosceles triangle when the base & side are given?Top AnswererDraw the base. From each end of the base mark off an arc with a radius equal to the length of the other side(s). The intersection of the arcs is the third vertex of the triangle. Connect the vertices. That's your triangle.
-
QuestionHow do I construct isosceles triangle ABC, having the difference of its hypotenuse and side equal to 20 mm?Top AnswererYou don't have enough information to construct the triangle. For one thing, you don't know whether the hypotenuse is larger or smaller than the other sides.
-
QuestionWhat are the properties of an isosceles triangle?Top AnswererAn isosceles triangle is one containing two (and only two) equal sides. The angles opposite the equal sides are also equal. The altitude drawn to the base (the non-equal side) of an isosceles triangle bisects the angle from which it's drawn. The altitude also bisects and is perpendicular to the base.
-
QuestionHow do I construct a triangle given 100 mm as side and the height as 70?Top AnswererDraw a straight line 100 mm in length. Consider it the base of the triangle. At any point on the base construct a perpendicular line 70 mm in length. Draw straight lines from the far end of the 70 mm line to each end of the 100 mm line. That forms a triangle. If it's to be an isosceles triangle, construct the perpendicular line at the midpoint of the base.
-
QuestionHow do I construct and isosceles triangle whose base is 3 cm and base angle is 45?Top AnswererCall the triangle ABC with base BC. Draw BC of length 3 cm. Using a protractor, from B draw a line 45° from BC. On the same side of BC, from C draw another line 45° from BC. The intersection of these two lines is point A.
-
QuestionHow do I construct the bisector of an angle?Top Answerer
-
QuestionHow do I draw an isosceles triangle with 2 sides of length 65 mm where the angle between these 2 equal sides is 52 degrees?Top AnswererSee Method 2 above.
-
QuestionHow can I construct an isosceles triangle of vertex angle 60⁰ and equal sides of 4.5 with base 6 cm?Top AnswererThis can't be done. An isosceles triangle with a vertex angle of 60° would also have base angles of 60° each, meaning that the triangle is equiangular and thus equilateral. That means it couldn't have a base length different from its side lengths.
-
QuestionHow do I construct a right isosceles triangle given the sum of one side and hypotenuse?Top AnswererYou would need more information before you could perform that construction.
-
QuestionHow do I construct an isosceles with the side (not the base) and its altitude/height given?Top AnswererYou're not given enough information to perform that construction.
-
QuestionHow do I construct an isosceles triangle ABC, given AB = AC = 4.9 cm and median AD to base BC is 4.2 cm?Top AnswererFirst draw median AD of length 4.2 cm. Draw a line of undetermined length perpendicular to AD at D. That line will become base BC. From A draw an arc of radius 4.9 cm intersecting BC at B and C. You now have points A, B and C, so you can draw the triangle.
Ask a Question
200 characters left
Include your email address to get a message when this question is answered.
Submit