Basic Math

Triangles | Fifth Grade

Triangles - Fifth Grade

Complete Notes & Formulas

What is a Triangle?

A triangle is a polygon with 3 sides, 3 angles, and 3 vertices (corners).

Important Triangle Properties

1. Three Sides: Every triangle has exactly 3 sides

2. Three Angles: Every triangle has exactly 3 angles

3. Three Vertices: Three corner points where sides meet

4. Closed Shape: All sides connect to form a closed figure

Most Important Formula

Sum of All Angles in a Triangle = 180°

∠A + ∠B + ∠C = 180°

Two Ways to Classify Triangles

ClassificationBased OnTypes
By AnglesSize of anglesAcute, Right, Obtuse
By SidesLength of sidesScalene, Isosceles, Equilateral

1. Acute, Obtuse, and Right Triangles

(Classification by Angles)

A. Acute Triangle

Definition: A triangle in which ALL three angles are less than 90°

∠A < 90°

∠B < 90°

∠C < 90°

All angles are acute (less than 90°)

Examples:

• Triangle with angles: 60°, 70°, 50° (all < 90°)

• Triangle with angles: 45°, 65°, 70° (all < 90°)

• Equilateral triangle: 60°, 60°, 60° (all < 90°)

Key Point: No angle reaches or exceeds 90° in an acute triangle!

B. Right Triangle

Definition: A triangle that has exactly ONE angle that measures 90° (a right angle)

One angle = 90° (right angle)

Other two angles are acute (< 90°)

The two acute angles add up to 90°

Special Terms:

Hypotenuse: The longest side (opposite the right angle)

Legs: The two sides that form the right angle

Right Angle Symbol: A small square (□) at the corner

Examples:

• Triangle with angles: 90°, 60°, 30°

• Triangle with angles: 90°, 45°, 45°

• Triangle with angles: 90°, 70°, 20°

Remember: Only ONE angle is 90°. If two or more angles were 90°, the sum would exceed 180°!

C. Obtuse Triangle

Definition: A triangle that has ONE angle that measures more than 90° (an obtuse angle)

One angle > 90° (obtuse angle)

Other two angles are acute (< 90°)

The obtuse angle is less than 180°

Examples:

• Triangle with angles: 120°, 40°, 20° (120° is obtuse)

• Triangle with angles: 100°, 50°, 30° (100° is obtuse)

• Triangle with angles: 95°, 55°, 30° (95° is obtuse)

Key Point: Only ONE angle can be obtuse. The other two must be acute to keep the sum at 180°!

Quick Comparison

TypeAngle RequirementExample
AcuteAll 3 angles < 90°60°, 70°, 50°
Right1 angle = 90°90°, 60°, 30°
Obtuse1 angle > 90°120°, 40°, 20°

2. Scalene, Isosceles, and Equilateral Triangles

(Classification by Sides)

A. Scalene Triangle

Definition: A triangle with ALL three sides of different lengths

Side A ≠ Side B ≠ Side C

All sides have different lengths

All angles have different measures

Properties:

No equal sides

No equal angles

No line of symmetry

Examples:

• Sides: 3 cm, 4 cm, 5 cm

• Sides: 6 inches, 8 inches, 10 inches

• Sides: 7 m, 9 m, 11 m

Remember: "Scalene" means "uneven" - no sides are the same!

B. Isosceles Triangle

Definition: A triangle with EXACTLY TWO sides of equal length

Side A = Side B ≠ Side C

Two sides are equal (legs)

Two angles are equal (base angles)

Special Terms:

Legs: The two equal sides

Base: The third side (different length)

Vertex Angle: The angle between the two equal sides

Base Angles: The two equal angles at the base

Properties:

Two equal sides

Two equal angles (opposite the equal sides)

One line of symmetry

Examples:

• Sides: 5 cm, 5 cm, 3 cm

• Sides: 8 inches, 8 inches, 10 inches

• Sides: 6 m, 4 m, 6 m

Remember: "Iso" means "same" - two sides are the same!

C. Equilateral Triangle

Definition: A triangle with ALL three sides of equal length

Side A = Side B = Side C

All sides are equal

All angles are equal (60° each)

Properties:

All three sides are equal

All three angles are 60° (equiangular)

Three lines of symmetry

Regular polygon (all sides and angles equal)

Each Angle = 60°

180° ÷ 3 = 60°

Examples:

• Sides: 4 cm, 4 cm, 4 cm

• Sides: 7 inches, 7 inches, 7 inches

• Sides: 10 m, 10 m, 10 m

Remember: "Equi" means "equal" - everything is equal! An equilateral triangle is ALWAYS acute!

Quick Comparison

TypeEqual SidesExample
Scalene0 (all different)3, 4, 5
Isosceles2 (two equal)5, 5, 3
Equilateral3 (all equal)6, 6, 6

3. Classify Triangles

(Combining Both Classifications)

Two-Way Classification

A triangle can be classified BOTH by its angles AND by its sides at the same time!

Every triangle has TWO names:

1. One name for ANGLES (acute, right, or obtuse)

2. One name for SIDES (scalene, isosceles, or equilateral)

Common Combinations

Combined NameDescriptionExample
Acute ScaleneAll angles < 90°, all sides differentSides: 3,4,5
Angles: 50°,60°,70°
Acute IsoscelesAll angles < 90°, two equal sidesSides: 5,5,4
Angles: 70°,70°,40°
Acute EquilateralAll angles 60°, all sides equalSides: 6,6,6
Angles: 60°,60°,60°
Right ScaleneOne 90° angle, all sides differentSides: 3,4,5
Angles: 90°,60°,30°
Right IsoscelesOne 90° angle, two equal sidesSides: 5,5,7
Angles: 90°,45°,45°
Obtuse ScaleneOne angle > 90°, all sides differentSides: 3,5,7
Angles: 120°,40°,20°
Obtuse IsoscelesOne angle > 90°, two equal sidesSides: 4,4,7
Angles: 110°,35°,35°

Important Notes

1. No Right Equilateral: An equilateral triangle cannot be right because all angles are 60°

2. No Obtuse Equilateral: An equilateral triangle is always acute (all 60°)

3. Equilateral is Always Acute: Since all angles are 60° (< 90°)

How to Classify a Triangle

Step 1: Look at the ANGLES

• All < 90°? → Acute

• One = 90°? → Right

• One > 90°? → Obtuse

Step 2: Look at the SIDES

• All different? → Scalene

• Two equal? → Isosceles

• All equal? → Equilateral

Step 3: Combine both names

Example: "Acute Isosceles Triangle"

Practice Examples

Example 1: Triangle with sides 5, 5, 8 and angles 70°, 70°, 40°

Angles: All < 90° → Acute

Sides: Two equal → Isosceles

Classification: Acute Isosceles Triangle

Example 2: Triangle with sides 3, 4, 5 and angles 90°, 60°, 30°

Angles: One = 90° → Right

Sides: All different → Scalene

Classification: Right Scalene Triangle

Example 3: Triangle with sides 6, 6, 6 and angles 60°, 60°, 60°

Angles: All < 90° (all 60°) → Acute

Sides: All equal → Equilateral

Classification: Acute Equilateral Triangle

Quick Reference Chart

Triangle Classification Summary

By Angles:

Acute: All angles < 90°

Right: One angle = 90°

Obtuse: One angle > 90°

By Sides:

Scalene: 0 equal sides (all different)

Isosceles: 2 equal sides

Equilateral: 3 equal sides (all 60°)

Key Formula:

∠A + ∠B + ∠C = 180°

💡 Important Tips to Remember

✓ All triangle angles always add up to 180°

✓ A triangle can have at most ONE right or obtuse angle

✓ An equilateral triangle is always acute (60° angles)

✓ An equilateral triangle is also isosceles (has 2 equal sides)

✓ In an isosceles triangle, the angles opposite equal sides are equal

✓ Every triangle has TWO names (one for angles, one for sides)

✓ The longest side is always opposite the largest angle

✓ A right triangle's longest side is called the hypotenuse

✓ Look for the square symbol (□) to identify right angles

✓ Use tick marks (') on sides to show equal lengths

🧠 Memory Tricks

For Angle Types:

Acute: "A-cute little angles" (all small, less than 90°)

Right: Has a "right" angle (90° - makes a corner)

Obtuse: "Oh, be obtuse!" (one big angle > 90°)

For Side Types:

Scalene: "Scale is uneven" - all sides different

Isosceles: "Two legs are same" (iso = same)

Equilateral: "Equal all around" (equi = equal)

Count Equal Sides:

• 0 equal sides = Scalene

• 2 equal sides = Isosceles

• 3 equal sides = Equilateral

The 180° Rule:

"Triangle Total = Turn around = 180°"

Master Triangles! 📐🔺

Triangles are everywhere - learn to identify and classify them!

Shares: