Wiki User
∙ 14y agoYes. It would be an equilateral triangle with three equal sides. It would also be equiangular, with three equal angles, each measuring 60 degrees.
Wiki User
∙ 14y agoYes, it is possible for a triangle to have sides with lengths of 9 cm, 9 cm, and 9 cm. This is known as an equilateral triangle, where all sides are equal in length.
The area of a rectangle of sides 9cm and 10cm is:9cm x 10cm = 90cm2This is equivalent to 0.009m2
Try it out... Draw a triangle with 5 cm sides and see if you can make them fit.
Area = 1/2 (base x height) If the triangle is sitting on the 9cm side, then 72 = 1/2 ( 9 x height ) Height = 16 cm There are an infinite number of ways to draw the remaining two sides such that the height of the triangle is 16 cm. So the given information doesn't define a unique perimeter.
yes
It will be a right angle triangle with a base of 3cm, a height of 4cm and a hypotenuse of 5cm
This is not an equilateral triangle.
The third side can have any value in the range (2 cm, 16 cm).
a scalene triangle is a triangle with three differant sides
The area of a rectangle of sides 9cm and 10cm is:9cm x 10cm = 90cm2This is equivalent to 0.009m2
Try it out... Draw a triangle with 5 cm sides and see if you can make them fit.
45 square cm
Area = 1/2 (base x height) If the triangle is sitting on the 9cm side, then 72 = 1/2 ( 9 x height ) Height = 16 cm There are an infinite number of ways to draw the remaining two sides such that the height of the triangle is 16 cm. So the given information doesn't define a unique perimeter.
A right triangle has a hypotenuse of 12cm and a leg that is 9cm the other leg would be 7.94. This is a math problem.
yes
It will be a right angle triangle with a base of 3cm, a height of 4cm and a hypotenuse of 5cm
Draw a triangle with sides of 4*234 cm, 5*234 cm and 7*234 cm = 936 cm, 1170 cm and 1638 cm.
No because the sum of its smaller sides must be greater than its longest side