-yes it is.
No, it is not possible to draw a triangle with sides of 150 cm, 10 cm, and 10 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, 10 cm + 10 cm is not greater than 150 cm.
A triangle has 3 sides.
Equilateral triangle.
No, it is impossible to draw any triangle with those side lengths:For a triangle to exist the sum of the shorter sides must exceed (ie be greater than) the longest sides.The sum of the shorter sides is 4 in + 10 in = 14 in which is the same as the longest side; thus those sides cannot form any triangle.
This is a scalene triangle as it has no equal sides or angles. It is not a right angle triangle.
This is not an equilateral triangle.
No, it is not possible to draw a triangle with sides of 150 cm, 10 cm, and 10 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, 10 cm + 10 cm is not greater than 150 cm.
No because the 3 sides of an equilateral triangle must be the same length.
If you mean units of 6 8 and 10 then yes they can form the sides of a right angle triangle.
A triangle has 3 sides.
Equilateral triangle.
A decagon has 7 more sides than a triangle. A triangle has 3 and a decagon has 10.
This is a scalene triangle as it has no equal sides or angles. It is not a right angle triangle.
No, it is impossible to draw any triangle with those side lengths:For a triangle to exist the sum of the shorter sides must exceed (ie be greater than) the longest sides.The sum of the shorter sides is 4 in + 10 in = 14 in which is the same as the longest side; thus those sides cannot form any triangle.
Then it is a scalene triangle
it is an acute triangle.
yes