Answer: Any isosceles triangle is a counter example. More specifically, a triangle with sides 7, 7 and 3
When forming your triangle, make sure you apply the triangle inequality theorem. This is the idea where adding any two sides leads to a result larger than the third side. So we have
7+7 = 14 which is larger than 3
7+3 = 10 which is larger than 7
By definition, an isosceles triangle has two congruent sides. Some books say "at least 2 congruent sides", but I'll go with the first definition. If you want all three sides to be congruent, then you'd go for the term "equilateral".
Answer:
<h2>A'(-1, -4)</h2>
Step-by-step explanation:
A(x, y)
reflected across the x-axis: A'(x, -y)
reflected across the y-axis: A''(-x, y)
We have A(1, 4)
reflected across the x-axis: (1, -4)
and then reflected across the y-axis: A'(-1, -4)
Distribute the signs: 12-14+9x
so, -2+9x
Answer:
320 calories
Step-by-step explanation:
1/4 would be 80 calories because 70 is ten less so it would be 80 = 1/4 so 80 times 4 would be 320 calories
Answer:
Step-by-step explanation:
5 x 2=10 x 3 = 30