sides
The orthocenter of a triangle may lie outside the triangle since the ___altitude___ may not intersect any side of the triangle. * * * * * No. One of the altitudes must intersect the side opposite it and so it is not correct to say ANY side of the triangle.
Yes, it can.
-- both triangles lie flat -- both triangles have three sides -- both triangles have three vertices (vertexes, points) -- both triangles have three inside angles and three outside angles -- neither triangle has more than one obtuse angle or more than one right angle inside it -- neither triangle has less than two acute angles inside it -- the inside angles of each triangle add up to 180 degrees -- the outside angles of each triangle add up to 360 degrees -- neither triangle has any side parallel to any other side -- the area of each triangle is half of the product of its base and its height -- no side of either triangle is longer than the sum of its other two sides -- no side of either triangle is shorter than the difference of its other two sides
Not normally
The orthocenter of a triangle may lie outside the triangle because an altitude does not necessarily intersect the sides of the triangle.
sides
No.
The orthocenter of a triangle may lie outside the triangle since the ___altitude___ may not intersect any side of the triangle. * * * * * No. One of the altitudes must intersect the side opposite it and so it is not correct to say ANY side of the triangle.
no
Yes, it can.
No.
of course!it is your choice
No, it may lie outside the body. In case of a circular ring, it is at the centre of the ring which is outside the mass of the ring.
Europe and Antarctica lie completely outside the tropics.
The "Lower 48".
Alaska and Hawai'i