Stage 15 · Triangles

15.1  Meeting the Triangle

Three sides, three angles, the sturdiest frame there is — and the rules they must obey.

Ages 11–14 · Reasoning, one step at a time
Knowledge point page

Point 4 of 6 in this lesson: 15.1.4 Sorting triangles by sides and by angles

15.1.4 Sorting triangles by sides and by angles

Triangles come in families, sorted two different ways — by their sides, and by their angles.

By sides

By angles

A triangle can have at most one right or obtuse angle. Why? If two angles were each 90° or more, they would already use up the whole 180° budget (or overspend it), leaving nothing for the third angle.

 acuterightobtuse
scalene5, 6, 73, 4, 54, 5, 7
isosceles5, 5, 61, 1, √25, 5, 9
equilateral6, 6, 6

An equilateral triangle is always acute (every angle is 60°), so two cells are impossible.

Try it Name this triangle
Move corner C again. Read off its family by sides and by angles as it changes.
slide C
eastmath.com · 15.1 Meeting the Triangle · 15.1.4 Sorting triangles by sides and by angles