No, it is not possible to have a triangle with sides of 4 cm, 6 cm, and 9 cm. According to the triangle inequality theorem, the sum of the lengths of any two sides must be greater than the length of the third side. In this case, 4 cm + 6 cm = 10 cm, which is greater than 9 cm, but 4 cm + 9 cm = 13 cm is greater than 6 cm, and 6 cm + 9 cm = 15 cm is also greater than 4 cm. However, the combination of these lengths does not satisfy the conditions to form a triangle.
It will be a right angle triangle with a base of 3cm, a height of 4cm and a hypotenuse of 5cm
12 cm
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.
No. The '6' and '4' sides would flop down and lie exactly on top of the '10' side.The whole thing would look like a line segment that's 10 cm long.
The sum of the 2 shorter sides must be greater than the longest side to form a triangle
Draw a triangle with sides of 4*234 cm, 5*234 cm and 7*234 cm = 936 cm, 1170 cm and 1638 cm.
This is a right angle triangle.
It will be a right angle triangle with a base of 3cm, a height of 4cm and a hypotenuse of 5cm
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'.
The 1st is a right angle triangle and the 2nd is a scalene triangle.
12 cm
Oh, what a happy little question! Yes, it is possible to build a triangle with sides of 3 cm, 4 cm, and 5 cm. This special triangle is called a right triangle, and it follows the Pythagorean theorem where the square of the longest side (5 cm) is equal to the sum of the squares of the other two sides (3 cm and 4 cm). So go ahead and paint that lovely triangle with confidence!
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.
That depends not only on the shape, but on how large it is. Any type of figure can be scaled so that it has any desired perimeter.Examples:A triangle with sides 1 cm, 2 cm, 6 cmA triangle with sides 1 cm, 2 cm, 5 cmA triangle with sides 2 cm, 3 cm, 4 cmA nonagon (more correctly an enneagon) with all sides 1 cm
Oh, no, that isn't true. We could have a scalene triangle with sides of, say, 2 cm, 3 cm, and 4 cm. Then we could have another scalene triangle with sides of 4 cm, 6 cm, and 8 cm. These two triangles would be similar because they have a ratio of 1:2, despite the fact that they are scalene. The term 'scalene' has nothing to do with similarity; it just means that a triangle has no equal sides.
Perimeter of Triangle = a + b + cso if you have an equilateral with say 4 cm sides you would add4+4+4=12cmJust add up its 3 equal sides
No. The '6' and '4' sides would flop down and lie exactly on top of the '10' side.The whole thing would look like a line segment that's 10 cm long.