acute triangle
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
Noun: A triangle in which all three interior angles are acute angles (each measuring less than 90 degrees).
Usage
The term "acute triangle" is used in geometry to classify a triangle based on the measures of its angles. It describes the fundamental property that every angle within the shape is acute.
Examples
- In geometry class, we learned that an acute triangle has all angles smaller than a right angle.
- The architect used an acute triangle as a key design element for the modern facade.
- If every internal angle of a triangle is less than 90 degrees, it is correctly classified as an acute triangle.
Advanced Usage
- "strictly acute triangle": Sometimes used in advanced mathematics to emphasize that no angle is a right angle (90°) or obtuse (>90°), which is inherent in the standard definition of an acute triangle.
- The concept is foundational for theorems and proofs involving inequalities in triangles, such as determining the relationship between sides and opposite angles.
Variants and Related Words
- Acute-angled triangle: A less common but perfectly synonymous term.
- Obtuse triangle: A triangle with one interior angle greater than 90 degrees.
- Right triangle: A triangle with one interior angle equal to 90 degrees.
- Equiangular triangle: A triangle where all three interior angles are equal (each 60 degrees); this is a specific type of acute triangle.
Synonyms
- Acute-angled triangle
Antonyms
- Obtuse triangle
- Right triangle (or right-angled triangle)
Noun
- a triangle whose interior angles are all acute