Stage 15 · Triangles

15.3  Congruent Triangles

Same shape, same size — and the three measurements that pin a triangle down for good.

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

Point 3 of 6 in this lesson: 15.3.3 Side-Side-Side (SSS)

15.3.3 Side-Side-Side (SSS)

Here is the rigidity of the triangle cashed in as a test. If the three sides of one triangle equal the three sides of another, the triangles are congruent. Fix three side lengths and there is essentially only one triangle you can build from them — flip it or turn it, but the shape is locked. We write the test as SSS (side–side–side).

You actually saw why in the construction lesson (15.2). To build a triangle from three given lengths, you lay one of them as a base, then swing one compass arc of each remaining length from the two ends. The two arcs cross at exactly one point above the base — so the apex has only one place to be, and the triangle is determined.

SSS: matching single, double, and triple ticks show all three sides equal, so the two triangles are congruent. The dashed compass arcs show the apex has only one possible spot.
Key idea — SSS

Three pairs of equal sides force congruence: AB=DE, BC=EF, CA=FD△ABC ≅ △DEF.

eastmath.com · 15.3 Congruent Triangles · 15.3.3 Side-Side-Side (SSS)