No because it does not comply with Pythagoras; theorem if the lengths were 10, 24 and 26 then it would be.
Yes and it will be a scalene triangle
The length of the hypotenuse of a right triangle with legs of lengths 6 and 8 is: 10
If you mean units of 6 8 and 10 then yes they can form the sides of a right angle triangle.
Yes. The side lengths of a triangle may measure 6, 8, and 10. It satisfies the triangle inequality (the sum of any two sides is greater than the third). Moreover, it forms a multiple of the common 3-4-5 right triangles.
A triangle has two sides of lengths 7 and 9. what value could the length of the third side be?
True because it complies with Pythagoras' theorem.
10
Yes and it will be a scalene triangle
Information about the lengths of two sides of a triangle is insufficient to determine its area.
false In order for this to be a right triangle, the sum of the squares of the two shorter sides would have to equal the square of the longest side. 102=100 242= 576 272=729 102+242= 676, which does not equal 272=729, so a triangle with these lengths is not a right triangle.
No. But they can be the lengths of the three sides.
Yup, it follows the 3, 4, 5 rule (or in this case 6, 8, 10). Triangles with those ratios in the lengths of its sides are always right triangles
The length of the hypotenuse of a right triangle with legs of lengths 6 and 8 is: 10
A triangle has 3 sides.
No
It is not possible to answer the question. A right triangular prism has sides of only four different lengths : the 3 sides of the triangular cross-section and the length of the prism. There are 5 lengths in the question. Even if there were only four lengths in the question, it is necessary to know which the sides of the triangle are and which the length is.
Those wouldn't be angle measurements, they would be sides. A triangle could be constructed with sides of those lengths.