Yes, but the third side will also have to be 4 cm.
If you ask: is it possible to construct a triangle with an angle of 60°
and only 2 equal sides but not three, that answer is 'no'.
You can but there are two possible solutions.
Yes how doe sit look like?
Such a triangle would be impossible to construct with the given 3 dimensions because in order to construct a triangle the sum of its 2 shortest sides must be greater than the length of its longest side.
Yes.But not exactly 2 sides of 4 cm.If one angle is 60 degrees and 2 sides are 4 cm each,then the third side must also be 4 cm.
It's not possible to have a right angle triangle with sides of equal length. The sides on a right angle triangle are always in the ratio 3:4:5.
a scalene triangle is a triangle with three differant sides
Yes providing the sum of its smaller sides is greater than its longest side which in this case will be the hypotenuse of a right angle triangle.
This triangle is called a scalene triangle.
Because the sum of the smaller sides is greater than the largest side and it is possible to construct one right angle triangle with the given lengths
Right triangle= has a right angle Acute triangle= has an acute angle Obtuse triangle= has an obtuse angle Equilateral triangle= all sides are the same length Scalene triangle= has no sides the same length Isosceles triangle= has only two sides the same length the triangles here make perfict dildose and condoms
how many lines of symmetry does a regular polygon with 32 sides have
The sum of the squares of the sides that include the right angle must equal the square of the hypotenuse (Pythagoras). To construct a right angle triangle the three sides can have proportions of 3, 4 and 5 relative to one-another. Example: 3 cm, 4 cm and 5 cm.