false
In order for this to be a right triangle, the sum of the squares of the two shorter sides would have to equal the square of the longest side.
102=100
242= 576
272=729
102+242= 676, which does not equal 272=729, so a triangle with these lengths is not a right triangle.
TRUE
If the lengths of the sides of the triangle can be substituted for 'a', 'b', and 'c'in the equationa2 + b2 = c2and maintain the equality, then the lengths of the sides are a Pythagorean triple, and the triangle is a right one.
No because it does not comply with Pythagoras' theorem.
In a right triangle, the side lengths follow Pythagora's Theorem: a^2 + b^2 = c^2; where a and b represent the lengths of the legs and c represents the hypotenuse.
A scalene triangle has three sides of different lengths. A right triangle can be scalene - for instance the '3-4-5' triangle has a right angle opposite the side which is 5 units long.
False.
TRUE
False because it does not comply with Pythagoras' theorem.
False because it does not comply with Pythagoras' theorem.
Does 742 = 242 + 702? If so, it is a right-angled triangle; if not, it isn't...
A triangle with a right angle and different lengths for sides is a right, scalene triangle.
True because it complies with Pythagoras' theorem.
false
A right triangle * * * * * No, it is a scalene triangle.
A scalene triangle is one that has three lengths of different sizes. It is quite possible for a right triangle to have three sides of different length.
False. It can't be.In a right triangle, the sum of the squares of the two short sides is equal to the squareof the longest side.122 = 144152 = 225-------------sum = 369202 = 400, not 369.So these are not the sides of a right triangle.
A triangle with no right angle and sides of different lengths is a scalene triangle.