How to find the length of the side of an acute / obtuse isosceles triangle
ISEE Upper Level Quantitative Reasoning · Learn by Concept
Help Questions
ISEE Upper Level Quantitative Reasoning › How to find the length of the side of an acute / obtuse isosceles triangle
1 - 2
1
Two sides of an isosceles triangle have lengths 3 feet and 4 feet. Which of the following could be the length of the third side?
CORRECT
Explanation
An isosceles triangle, by definition, has two sides of equal length. Having the third side measure either 3 feet or 4 feet would make the triangle meet this criterion.
3 feet is equal to inches, and 4 feet is equal to
inches. We choose 36 inches, since that, but not 48 inches, is a choice.
2
The triangles are similar. Solve for .

CORRECT
Explanation
Because the triangles are similar, proportions can be used to solve for the length of the side:
Cross-multiply: