The triangle ABC is shown below.
To which side(s) are the median and the altitude drawn?
The triangle ABC is shown below.
To which side(s) are the median and the altitude drawn?
Look at the triangle below.
Which side is the height and which side is the median?
ABC is a triangle.
To which of its sides are the height and the median drawn?
Which side of triangle ABC is both the median and the height drawn to?
The triangle ABC is shown below.
To which side are the median and the altitude drawn?
The triangle ABC is shown below.
To which side(s) are the median and the altitude drawn?
To solve the problem of identifying to which side of triangle the median and the altitude are drawn, let's analyze the diagram given for triangle .
Thus, the side to which both the median and the altitude are drawn is BC.
Therefore, the correct answer to the problem is the side , corresponding with choice .
BC
Look at the triangle below.
Which side is the height and which side is the median?
To solve this problem, we need to analyze the roles of line segment DC in the triangle ABC:
Step 1: Identify if DC is a height
A height (altitude) is a line segment from a vertex perpendicular to the opposite side. The image suggests that line DC is vertical, with apparent perpendicularity to BC due to the presence of D near the center of the triangle, making DC a plausible height.
Step 2: Identify if DC is the median
A median divides the opposite side into two equal lengths, from a vertex. Without explicit symmetry in the image, but assuming graphic accuracy and typical diagram problems, DC can be a median if D is the midpoint.
Step 3: Confirm if DC is both a height and a median
In instances such as isosceles or equilateral triangles, a segment can be both. Given D’s position and symmetric considerations from vertex A, it's likely DC is both here.
Thus, line segment DC is both the median and the height.
Therefore, the correct answer is DC = median and height.
DC = median and height
ABC is a triangle.
To which of its sides are the height and the median drawn?
To determine which side has both the height and median, let's examine the geometric definitions and their implications in a triangle:
Both a median and height coincide on the same side only under specific symmetrical conditions, such as when the triangle is isosceles (with that side as the base) or when the altitude divides it symmetrically.
In the given problem, since the components align such that both structures exist on the 'base' of symmetry (where the perpendicular bisects and equalizes), hence an educated assumption goes to the side 'AB'.
Thus, the side upon which both the height and the median are drawn is .
AB
Which side of triangle ABC is both the median and the height drawn to?
To solve this problem, we need to use the properties of medians and heights, specifically in isosceles triangles. In an isosceles triangle, the median from the vertex angle to the base is also the height. In the diagram of triangle ABC, given the problem context and a typical configuration of an isosceles triangle, we can see that:
Therefore, in triangle ABC, side AB is both the median and the height of the triangle, assuming a vertical symmetry along median AD, characteristic of an isosceles triangle configuration.
Therefore, the correct answer is .
AB
The triangle ABC is shown below.
To which side are the median and the altitude drawn?
In the problem of determining which side of triangle ABC has a median and an altitude drawn, we begin by understanding the role of these geometric features:
Medians: A median originates from one vertex and connects to the midpoint of the opposing side. Therefore, it must appear as a line bisecting opposite side.
Altitudes: An altitude also starts from a vertex but descends perpendicularly to the opposite side, forming a right angle.
In exploring the labels and positional intersection lines on the provided diagram, if available, we do not find a clear depiction through the labels and positions alone, which allows us to exactly pinpoint a side being bisected or with a right angle from a vertex. The problem declaratively assures no qualification dominantly demonstrating altitude (notably not perpendicular) or median (not clearly bisecting any side).
Thus, the correct choice and conclusion is that neither is correctly shown in respecting any side of the triangle ABC.
Therefore, no side of triangle ABC has a defined median and altitude drawn distinctly according to known geometric properties and referential diagram analysis.
No side
No side
ABC is a triangle.
Which of the lines is the height and which is the median?
Look at the triangle in the diagram below.
To which side is the median and the height drawn?
The triangle ABC is shown below.
Which side or sides are the height and the median drawn to?
ABC is a triangle.
Which of the lines is the height and which is the median?
To solve this problem, we need to correctly identify the height and median in the triangle .
Therefore, the solution to the problem is height, median.
BC + AB = height,
EB = median
Look at the triangle in the diagram below.
To which side is the median and the height drawn?
To solve this problem, we'll observe features of the diagram and follow these steps:
Now, let's apply these steps:
Step 1: The diagram shows triangle with a line drawn from point to the base . Note that there is an apparent point where this line intersects perpendicularly.
Step 2: The line can be considered both the height and the median:
Therefore, the solution to the problem is that both the median and the height are drawn to side .
BC
The triangle ABC is shown below.
Which side or sides are the height and the median drawn to?
To solve this problem, we'll verify which side or sides have the height and the median based on their definitions.
First, we identify what constitutes a height in the triangle. A height, or an altitude, is a perpendicular line segment from one vertex to the opposite side or its extension. In many triangles, this is represented by a line that intersects at a right angle with the side it is drawn to.
The median of a triangle is a line segment drawn from a vertex to the midpoint of the opposite side. It divides the opposite side into two equal parts.
Now, we'll analyze the given diagram:
Upon reviewing the diagram, there appear to be no segments that are clearly perpendicular from a vertex to the opposite side, suggesting no height is drawn. Similarly, there is no indication of a line from a vertex bisecting the opposite side, suggesting no median is concretely drawn either.
Therefore, based on this analysis, we conclude that no sides have the height or median explicitly drawn to them in this diagram.
The correct choice, given this information, is: No sides.
No sides