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Yes and the given lengths would form an isosceles triangle.
Any number between 3 and 15
The last side length could be between 4 units and 10 units inclusive.
You could have an isosceles triangle with sides 3, 3, and 2. I think that's the only one.
Those wouldn't be angle measurements, they would be sides. A triangle could be constructed with sides of those lengths.
If its a right angle triangle then its side lengths could be 3, 4 and 5
Yes and the given lengths would form an isosceles triangle.
Any number between 3 and 15
If any of its 2 sides is not greater than its third in length then a triangle can't be formed.
1:square root 3
It can't.
The last side length could be between 4 units and 10 units inclusive.
Yes
Yes.
The sides of a triangle are its lengths are cannot be negative. However, you could place a triangle on coordinate system and some points where the vertices are could be negative numbers.
The list that accompanies the question doesn't contain any numbers that could be the lengths of the sides of a triangle.
7cm