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Identifying Pythagoras' Theorem
Rung 3 of 4 · The traps

It's Opposite the Right Angle — and Only Right Angles Count

Two mix-ups trip almost everyone: thinking the hypotenuse is just "the bottom one", and using the theorem on triangles that aren't right-angled at all.


ExploreSpin the triangle so the longest side isn't on the bottom, then bend it so the corner isn't square — and watch the rule break.
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The theorem itself is rock-solid. The slips happen when we mislabel the hypotenuse, or reach for the rule on a triangle that was never entitled to it.

Trap One: the Hypotenuse Isn't "the Bottom"

Because textbooks usually draw the slanted long side along the base, people start believing the hypotenuse is wherever the bottom is. It isn't. Spin the triangle in the toy and the longest side ends up on top, on the side, anywhere — but it's always the one sitting straight across from the right angle. The right angle points at its hypotenuse like an arrow.

Say it plainly: the hypotenuse is opposite the right angle, full stop. Not the bottom, not the left, not the longest-looking one — the one the square corner faces.

Trap Two: Only Right-angled Triangles Allowed

Pythagoras' theorem is a deal that comes with one strict condition: there must be a right angle. Bend the apex in the toy so the marked angle is, say, 70° or 100°, and the equation falls apart — a² + b² no longer matches . The little square marker is your permission slip. No square corner, no theorem.

How to Stay Safe

Two quick checks before you ever write a² + b² = c². First, is there a right angle? Look for the box, or for wording that promises one. Second, which side is opposite it? That side, and only that side, is your c. Do those two checks and both traps simply vanish.

Us, Thinking Out Loud

If a triangle is tipped over, how do you still find the hypotenuse?

Why does the rule break the instant the corner stops being square?