This document discusses inequalities involving angles and sides of triangles. It presents several theorems: (1) In a scalene triangle, the largest angle lies opposite the longest side and the smallest angle opposite the shortest side. (2) The converse of this is that in a scalene triangle, the longest side lies opposite the largest angle and the shortest side opposite the smallest angle. (3) The triangle inequality theorem states that the sum of the lengths of any two sides of a triangle is greater than the length of the third side. Several examples demonstrate applying these theorems to identify angles, sides, and determine if a triangle is possible given certain side lengths. The document concludes with assigning practice problems.