Question:
is it always possible to embed a complete, symmetric and metric graph $G$ with $n+1$ vertices isometrically in $\mathbb{R}^n$?
I'm convinced it must be true, but can't remember having seen a proof of it.
Addendum:
The following is a simple counterexample for $n=3$:
take as the vertices the corners of a planar strictly convex quadrilateral and as edgelengths the euclidean distance between the points they connect.
If the weight of an edge that corresponds to a diagonal is increased the resulting $K_4$ can't be embedded isometrically in $\mathbb{R}^3$, the reason being that the other diagonal "acts" as a hinge joint and rotating the adjacent triangles around it, out of the planar position, inevitably brings their opposite corners closer together.