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
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Point 4 of 6 in this lesson: 15.3.4 Side-Angle-Side (SAS)

15.3.4 Side-Angle-Side (SAS)

You don't always need all three sides. Two sides and the angle between them are enough. If two sides and the included angle of one triangle equal the matching two sides and included angle of another, the triangles are congruent. This is SAS (side–angle–side). The word included is the whole game: the angle must be the one tucked between the two named sides, like the hinge between two arms of a pair of scissors. Fix the two arms and the angle of the hinge, and the far ends have nowhere else to go.

SAS: the marked angle sits between the two marked sides. That included angle is the hinge — open it the same amount with the same two arms and the triangles must match.
Watch out — SSA is not a test

If the angle is not between the two sides, the test fails. With two sides and a non-included angle (“SSA”), the side opposite the angle can swing to two different landing spots — giving two different triangles. Two sides and a stray angle are simply not enough.

The SSA trap: same angle at the left, same long side, same swinging side — but it can close at two different points. SSA does not pin the triangle down.
eastmath.com · 15.3 Congruent Triangles · 15.3.4 Side-Angle-Side (SAS)