No; for a triangle to be possible, the sum of any 2 sides must be greater than the third. For (6.6+15.4>7.3) and (7.3+15.4>6.6) it works, but (6.6+7.3>15.4) does not, since 6.6+7.3 is 13.9, less than 15.4.
no
yes
Yes it can.
No. With the given side lengths the sum of the two shorter sides do not exceed the length of the longest side and would not meet to form a triangle
No. The sum of any two lengths must be greater than the third length.
Yes you can.
No. The sum of the lengths of two sides of a triangle must always at least slightly exceed the length of the third side, and the given numbers do not conform to this rule.
no
no
yes
Yes it can.
No. With the given side lengths the sum of the two shorter sides do not exceed the length of the longest side and would not meet to form a triangle
That depends on what the side lengths are. Until the side lengths are known, the triangle can only be classified as a triangle.
No. The sum of any two lengths must be greater than the third length.
Yes they can. Where the shortest sides added together are greater than the longest side, a triangle is formed.
A scalene triangle is one type of triangle that will be formed from the given dimensions.
Using Pythagoras' theorem the hypotenuse works out as 10 cm