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Yes. A triangle can have only one obtuse angle. The other two angles will always be acute.
name two obtuse angles in the figue
One angle must be over 90 degrees (an obtuse angle), and the other two angles under 90 degrees (acute angles). ^-^
Yes, an obtuse triangle can have two congruent angles, where for the obtuse angle measuring A degrees, each of the two other angles measures (180-A)/2.
The other two angles would be acute angles
yes, there can be an obtuse internal angle in a triangle, but keep in mind that the other two angles' sums plus the obtuse angle can only equal 180 degrees (meaning that the other non-obtuse angles will be very small acute angles)
One angle must be an obtuse angle and the other two angles must be acute angles
No because it only has a Right angle. It doesn't have an Obtuse angle, or other angles.
Yes. A triangle can have only one obtuse angle. The other two angles will always be acute.
name two obtuse angles in the figue
Trapezoids ALWAYS have at least one obtuse angle (if they have two right angles, then there will only be one obtuse angle), usually two (in any other circumstance, they will have two obtuse and two acute angles).
An obtuse angle is greater than 90° (and less than 180° ) The other two angles therefore total less than 90° and so both must be acute angles.
One angle must be over 90 degrees (an obtuse angle), and the other two angles under 90 degrees (acute angles). ^-^
Yes, an obtuse triangle can have two congruent angles, where for the obtuse angle measuring A degrees, each of the two other angles measures (180-A)/2.
The other two angles would be acute angles
An obtuse triangle whose other two angles will be acute angles
A trapezoid can have a maximum of 2 obtuse angles. An obtuse angle is one that measures greater than 90 degrees. In a trapezoid, two of the angles are acute angles (less than 90 degrees) and the other two angles can be either acute or obtuse.