Yes. Lets say one side is 110 degrees. A triangle equals 180 degrees so the rest is split into 70 degrees. So one side is 110 and the 2 others are 70 degrees which would be yes. No. The sum of the lengths of any two sides of a triangle will always be more than the length of the third side of the triangle.
The length of the third side must be greater than the difference between the length of the two given sides and it must be less than the sum of the two given sides. These limits can be derived from the fact that any two sides of a triangle must have a combined length greater than the third side.
no it can not be eaual but it can be greater than The sum of the lengths of any two sides of a triangle is greater than the length of the third side.
Its third side.
It can be any length more than 6 and less than 20.
This would be an isosceles triangle.
in which the sum of two sides less than or equal to the third side.
If two sides of a triangle each have length of 45 units, then the triangle is isosceles,and the third side can have any length less than 90 units.
The third side must be less than 13 but greater than 5.
A triangle has 3 sides. The sum of any two sides must be larger than or equal to the length of the third side, and the difference of any two sides must be less than or equal to the length of the third side.
The third side of a triangle must be greater than the absolute difference of the two given sides and less than the sum of the two given sides. In this case, the third side must be greater than |7-9| = 2 and less than 7+9 = 16. Therefore, the possible lengths for the third side of the triangle could be any value greater than 2 and less than 16.
If two sides of a triangle have lengths of 5cm and 12cm, then the third side can have any length that's more than 7cm and less than 17cm. If the third side is 13cm, then the triangle is a right triangle.
You need the measures of two sides and for the triangle to be a right triangle to figure out the third side.
The third side would be either 5 or 8,as an isosceles triangle has 2 equal sides.
To create a triangle, the sum of the two shorter sides must be greater than the third side. If the longest side is one of the two given sides, then the missing side must be greater than the difference between the two shorter sides. If the missing side is the longest side then the missing side must be less than the sum of the two shorter sides.
The length of the third side must be greater than the difference between the length of the two given sides and it must be less than the sum of the two given sides. These limits can be derived from the fact that any two sides of a triangle must have a combined length greater than the third side.
Two sides of a triangle do not, automatically, give you the measure of the third side. Further information about the triangle is required.
Oh, what a happy little triangle we have here! To find the possible length of the third side, we can use the triangle inequality theorem. The third side must be greater than the difference between the other two sides and less than the sum of the other two sides. So, the third side could be any length between 5 and 19 units.