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Could 7.7 cm, 4.0 cm, and 1.7 cm be the side lengths of a triangle?

User Fjoe
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2 Answers

3 votes

Answer:

False

Explanation:

Hope this helps!

User Mark Chackerian
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  • Triangle Inequality Theorem: States that the sum of any two sides of a triangle is greater than the length of the third side;
    A+B>C\\B+C>A\\A+C>B

So for this, we are applying the triangle inequality theorem. If any of the inequalities are not true, then this cannot be a triangle. (Let A = 7.7, B = 4.0, and C = 1.7)


7.7+4.0>1.7\\11.7>1.7\ \textsf{(true)}\\\\4.0+1.7>7.7\\5.7>7.7\ \textsf{(false)}\\\\7.7+1.7>4.0\\9.4>4.0\ \textsf{(true)}

Since the second inequality is false, these lengths cannot form a triangle.

User Nojetlag
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