Well, honey, it's not impossible to draw an acute scalene triangle, but it's definitely a challenge. You see, a scalene triangle has all sides of different lengths, and an acute triangle has all angles less than 90 degrees. So, you gotta make sure those side lengths and angles play nice together to make it work. Good luck, darling!
Draw two lines AB and AC that meet at point A. The angle BAC is greater than 90° but less than 180°. Let AB > AC. Draw a third line BC to complete the triangle so that BC is not equal to AB or AC. The triangle is a scalene triangle containing an obtuse angle.
no
It's impossible.
It will be a right angle triangle with a 90 degree angle and 2 acute angles
an iscoceles triangle
Yes to both
It is possible.
The answer is no.
right obtuse triangle
A triangle can only have 1 right angle or 1 obtuse angle in it because its 3 interior angles add up to 180 degrees
Of course. "Acute" means that all angles are less than 90 degrees, and "scalene" means that none of its sides or angles match. Draw an equilaterial triangle and then nudge one point slightly, on a path which is parallel to the opposite side. Acute scalene triangle.
a right obtuse triangle, a scalene triangle, and a right equilateral triangle
Scalene means the triangle has 3 sides unequal length. Acute means the triangle has 3 acute angles (less than 90o). So you should be able to draw a scalene acute triangle pretty easily. An equilateral triangle has all sides the same length and all angles are 60o. If you stretch one side a little, and shrink another side a little you will have a scalene triangle. And as long as you haven't stretched or shrunk the sides too far, it will also still be acute.
no, it is impossible
By constructing a triangle whose 3 sides are of different lengths and its 3 interior acute angles have different sizes
By constructing a triangle whose 3 sides are of different lengths and its 3 interior acute angles have different sizes
Yes providing its other two acute angles are of different sizes