Three basic theorems, confusingly more about the behaviour of homomorphisms than that of isomorphisms (they show what certain objects generated using a homomorphism are isomorphic to). These are considerably more universal than would appear; natural generalisations hold outside group theory, e.g. in ring theory, linear algebra, and more exotic areas. In the language of category theory, they hold for Abelian categories, of which these are all examples.

Note the exceedingly original terminology: