A "scalene triangle" is a triangle with three unequal sides. As far as I can tell, this term is not in much use in serious mathematics — in fact, before I became a high school math teacher, I'd forgotten the term existed. However, it is almost universally stressed as an important class of triangles in high school geometry courses in the United States.
I have two questions:
Q1: Who developed/popularized the use of the term scalene to refer to triangles of this type? Why, even, is this term useful? Unlike "isosceles" or "equilateral," being "scalene" is not really a special property of a triangle, but rather seems to be the default condition of an arbitrary triangle.
Q2: How was this term enshrined in American geometry education? Is there any justification for its prominence in the standard curriculum?
Earliest Known Uses of Some of the Words of Mathematics traces "scalene" (in English) back to 1570. But I expect Euclid used σκαληνός.