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Can a polygon be equilateral but not Equiangular? - Answers

A polygon cannot be equilateral but not equiangular because in the definiton of a regular polygon which is a polygon that is both equiangular and equilateral you see that you cannot have one without the other. As long as a polygon is equilateral it is also equilangular and vice versa. ARBETTES: You cannot have both in all polygons. In all triangles this is true. If a triangle is equilateral then it is equiangular. However, let's take a known quadrilateral: Rhombus. The definition of a Rhombus is that it has all equal sides. That's it. It's oppsite angles have to be congruent, but they do not all have to be 90 degrees.



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Can a polygon be equilateral but not Equiangular? - Answers

https://math.answers.com/geometry/Can_a_polygon_be_equilateral_but_not_Equiangular

A polygon cannot be equilateral but not equiangular because in the definiton of a regular polygon which is a polygon that is both equiangular and equilateral you see that you cannot have one without the other. As long as a polygon is equilateral it is also equilangular and vice versa. ARBETTES: You cannot have both in all polygons. In all triangles this is true. If a triangle is equilateral then it is equiangular. However, let's take a known quadrilateral: Rhombus. The definition of a Rhombus is that it has all equal sides. That's it. It's oppsite angles have to be congruent, but they do not all have to be 90 degrees.



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https://math.answers.com/geometry/Can_a_polygon_be_equilateral_but_not_Equiangular

Can a polygon be equilateral but not Equiangular? - Answers

A polygon cannot be equilateral but not equiangular because in the definiton of a regular polygon which is a polygon that is both equiangular and equilateral you see that you cannot have one without the other. As long as a polygon is equilateral it is also equilangular and vice versa. ARBETTES: You cannot have both in all polygons. In all triangles this is true. If a triangle is equilateral then it is equiangular. However, let's take a known quadrilateral: Rhombus. The definition of a Rhombus is that it has all equal sides. That's it. It's oppsite angles have to be congruent, but they do not all have to be 90 degrees.

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      A polygon cannot be equilateral but not equiangular because in the definiton of a regular polygon which is a polygon that is both equiangular and equilateral you see that you cannot have one without the other. As long as a polygon is equilateral it is also equilangular and vice versa. ARBETTES: You cannot have both in all polygons. In all triangles this is true. If a triangle is equilateral then it is equiangular. However, let's take a known quadrilateral: Rhombus. The definition of a Rhombus is that it has all equal sides. That's it. It's oppsite angles have to be congruent, but they do not all have to be 90 degrees.
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