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  1. 2nd Grade Math
  2. Identify Triangles

2ND GRADE MATH • GEOMETRY

Identify Triangles

Learn to spot triangles everywhere by counting their sides, corners, and special features!

Section 1

Where Did Triangles Come From?

People have been drawing and using triangles for thousands and thousands of years! Triangles are one of the very first shapes that humans ever studied. Let's take a little trip through time to see how people used triangles long ago.

Long, Long Ago
People who lived in caves drew pointy shapes on rocks. Some of those pointy shapes were triangles! They were some of the first drawings ever made.
Ancient Egypt
The Egyptians built the great pyramids. Each side of a pyramid is a giant triangle! They used triangles because they are very strong shapes.
Ancient Greece
A man named Euclid wrote a big book about shapes. He showed that a triangle always has 3 sides and 3 corners. People still use his ideas today!
Today
We see triangles all around us — in road signs, bridges, roofs, pizza slices, and even musical instruments! Triangles are one of the most important shapes in our world.

So here is the big question: How do we know if a shape is really a triangle? What makes a triangle different from a square or a circle? Let's find out!

Section 2

What Makes a Triangle a Triangle?

A triangle is a flat shape with some very special features. Every single triangle in the whole world follows these rules. If a shape follows all of these rules, it is a triangle. If it breaks even one rule, it is NOT a triangle!

1

3 Straight Sides

A triangle has exactly 3 sides. Each side is a straight line — not curved or wiggly. No more sides, no fewer sides. Just 3!
2

3 Corners (Angles)

A triangle has exactly 3 corners. We also call corners angles. That is where two sides meet and make a pointy spot.
3

Closed Shape

All 3 sides must connect together with no gaps. The shape has to be closed — like a fence with no opening. You can't have a missing piece!
4

Flat (2D)

A triangle is a flat shape. You can draw it on paper. It is not a 3D object like a ball or a box. It is two-dimensional!
✦ Key Takeaway
Think of a triangle like a sandwich cut corner-to-corner. When you cut a square sandwich from one corner to the opposite corner, each piece has 3 straight sides and 3 pointy corners. That's a triangle! If you see 3 straight sides and 3 corners on any shape, you found a triangle.
Section 3

See the Triangle!

Let's look closely at a triangle. This big picture shows you every part of a triangle. You can see the 3 sides and the 3 corners (angles). Each side is labeled, and each corner has a little curved line to show where the angle is.

Side 1Side 2Side 3Corner 1Corner 2Corner 3A TRIANGLE: 3 sides + 3 corners
A TRIANGLE: 3 sides + 3 corners

Look at the picture above. Can you count the sides? 1, 2, 3 — three straight sides! Now count the corners (the pink dots): 1, 2, 3 — three corners! Every single side is a straight line, and all the sides are connected. There are no gaps. That is how we know this shape is a triangle.

The word "triangle" even has a clue inside it! The "tri" part means three. And "angle" means corner. So "triangle" means "three corners." Pretty cool, right?

Section 4

Count and Check: Is It a Triangle?

You can follow easy steps every time you want to figure out if a shape is a triangle. Here is a simple way to check. Think of it like a checklist!

Triangle Checklist
3 straight sides + 3 corners + closed shape = Triangle ✅
If any part is missing, it is NOT a triangle.

Let's practice checking! Ask yourself these 3 questions about any shape:

ℹ Question 1: Does it have exactly 3 sides?
Count the sides carefully. If there are 4 sides, it might be a rectangle or a square. If there are 5 sides, that's a pentagon. You need exactly 3.
ℹ Question 2: Are all the sides straight?
If any side is curved or bumpy, it is not a triangle. All 3 sides must be perfectly straight lines.
ℹ Question 3: Is the shape closed?
All the sides must connect together. Imagine trying to color inside the shape. If the color would leak out through a gap, the shape is not closed. A triangle must be completely closed!
Counting Sides and Corners
Sides = 3 | Corners = 3
A triangle ALWAYS has the same number of sides and corners: three of each!

Here is something neat: the number of sides always equals the number of corners. If a shape has 3 sides, it will have 3 corners. If you count 3 corners but only 2 sides, something is wrong! Count again carefully.

Section 5

Different Kinds of Triangles

Not all triangles look the same! Some are tall and skinny. Some are short and wide. Some have sides that are all the same length. But they are ALL still triangles because they ALL have 3 straight sides and 3 corners. Let's look at some different types.

All Sides Equal3 equal sidesTwo Sides Equal2 equal sidesNo Sides EqualAll differentRight TriangleHas a square cornerALL of these are triangles! They all have 3 sides and 3 corners.

Look at the picture above. The first triangle has all 3 sides the same length. The second triangle has 2 sides that are the same and 1 side that is different. The third triangle has all different sides. The fourth triangle has a special square corner — we call that a "right angle."

Even though they all look different, they are ALL triangles! That is because every single one has 3 straight sides and 3 corners. The sizes and lengths don't matter when we are deciding if a shape is a triangle or not.

Triangle TypeWhat Makes It SpecialSidesCorners
All Sides EqualEvery side is the same length33
Two Sides EqualTwo sides match, one is different33
No Sides EqualAll sides are different lengths33
Right TriangleHas one square corner33

Notice something cool in the table? The "Sides" and "Corners" columns are the same for every row: 3 and 3. That never changes for a triangle!

Section 6

Let's Try One Together!

Imagine your teacher draws a shape on the board. You need to figure out: is it a triangle? Let's go step by step.

🔍 Example: Is This Shape a Triangle?

Setup

Your teacher draws a shape with 3 straight sides that are all connected. One side goes across the bottom. One side goes up to the left. One side goes up to the right. They all meet at corners.

Step 1 — Count the Sides

Point to each side and count: 1 (bottom), 2 (left), 3 (right). That's 3 sides. ✅ This matches our checklist!

Step 2 — Check If Sides Are Straight

Are all the sides straight lines? Yes! None of them are curved or wiggly. All 3 sides are straight. ✅

Step 3 — Count the Corners

Where do the sides meet? They meet at 3 spots — the bottom-left, the bottom-right, and the top. That's 3 corners. ✅

Step 4 — Check If It's Closed

Are all the sides connected with no gaps? Yes! If you tried to color it in, no color would leak out. The shape is completely closed. ✅

Final Answer

✅ 3 sides, ✅ all straight, ✅ 3 corners, ✅ closed shape.
Yes — it IS a triangle! Great job!
Section 7

Triangles vs. Other Shapes

Sometimes shapes can look a little like triangles, but they are not! Let's compare triangles to other shapes so you never get tricked. The easiest way to tell shapes apart is to count the sides and corners.

ShapeSidesCornersHow to Tell
Triangle333 straight sides, 3 corners — always!
Square444 equal sides, 4 square corners
Rectangle444 sides, 4 square corners, opposite sides equal
Circle00Round, no straight sides or corners at all
Pentagon555 straight sides — that's 2 more than a triangle!
Hexagon666 straight sides — like a honeycomb piece

See how each shape has a different number of sides and corners? A triangle is the shape with the fewest straight sides — just 3! You can't make a closed flat shape with straight sides using fewer than 3 sides. That makes triangles really special.

✦ Key Takeaway
Think of shapes like teams. A triangle is a team of 3 players (3 sides). A square has 4 players. A pentagon has 5 players. If you count the players on the team, you always know which shape you're looking at! And you can't have a team with fewer than 3 players — that's why 3 is the smallest number of sides a shape can have.
Section 8

What Will You Learn Next?

Now that you can identify triangles, there are even more exciting things to learn about them! As you grow up and learn more math, triangles will keep showing up. Here is a little peek at what's coming.

What You Know NowWhat You'll Learn Later
A triangle has 3 sidesYou can measure each side with a ruler
A triangle has 3 cornersYou can measure angles with a special tool
Some triangles have equal sidesThese have special names like "equilateral"
Triangles are flat shapesA 3D triangle shape is called a "pyramid"
You can spot a triangle by countingYou can find the area inside a triangle

Don't worry about those big words right now. Just remember: everything you learn about triangles later starts with what you know today — 3 sides, 3 corners, closed shape. You already have the most important part!

Section 9

Practice Time!

Try these problems on your own! Click "Show Answer" when you're ready to check your work. Take your time and remember to count the sides and corners.

PROBLEM 1 — WHAT DO YOU REMEMBER?
How many sides does a triangle have? How many corners does it have?
PROBLEM 2 — PICK THE TRIANGLE
You see three shapes: Shape A has 4 sides and 4 corners. Shape B has 3 straight sides and 3 corners, and it is closed. Shape C is round with no corners. Which shape is a triangle?
PROBLEM 3 — TRICKY SHAPE
A shape has 3 sides, but one of the sides is curved (not straight). Two sides are straight. Is this shape a triangle? Why or why not?
PROBLEM 4 — REAL LIFE
Your friend says: "I see a yield sign on the road. It has 3 straight sides and 3 corners. But it looks different from the triangles in my math book because the point is at the bottom, not the top." Is the yield sign still a triangle? Explain your answer.
PROBLEM 5 — THINK HARD!
Can you draw a closed shape that has straight sides and fewer than 3 sides? Try it! What happens?
Summary

Let's Review!

Today you learned how to identify a triangle! A triangle is a flat, closed shape that always has exactly 3 straight sides and exactly 3 corners (also called angles). The word "tri" means three, which is a clue right in the name! To check if any shape is a triangle, you count the sides (must be 3), make sure they're all straight, count the corners (must be 3), and make sure the shape is closed with no gaps.

You also learned that triangles come in different sizes and shapes — some have all equal sides, some have two equal sides, some have no equal sides, and some have a special square corner. But no matter what they look like, they ALL have 3 sides and 3 corners. You can find triangles everywhere: in road signs, buildings, pizza slices, and so much more. Now you are a triangle expert!

Varsity Tutors • 2nd Grade Mathematics (Common Core) • Identify Triangles