No it cannot, because the four angles must sum to 360 degrees.
No because the total sum of interior angles of a parallelogram are 360 degrees.
They work out as two equal opposite angles of 120 degrees and two equal opposite angles of 60 degrees.
Depends on your question. A rectangle is a parallelogram and has 4 right angles. BUT A parallelogram can have only a total of one, two, or four right angles. Mathematically, 3 right angles is 270 degrees. A parallelogram has 360 degrees. 360 - 270 = 90 degrees = right angle.
The question does not really make sense. Once might ask, "Are consecutive angles in a parallelogram complementary?" in which case the answer is no. Complementary angles are angles which add up to 90 degrees. Consecutive angles are angles next to each other (or follow each other). In a parallelogram, consecutive angles are supplementary (add to 180 degrees). In a parallelogram, opposite angles are equal. You could have a parallelogram where two angles are 45 degree (and thus complementary) and then the other two angles would be 135 degrees.
In a parallelogram, opposite angles are equal. Since two angles measure 40 degrees each, the opposite angles are also 40 degrees. Therefore, the measures of the other two angles in the parallelogram are also 40 degrees each.
If one angle is 10 degrees, its opposite angle is also 10 degrees. Since consecutive angles are supplementary, each pair of angles has to add up to 180 degrees so the other angles have to be 170 degrees. Therefore this parallelogram has two 10 degree angles and two 170 degree angles.
The Parallelogram Consecutive Angles Conjecture states that the consecutive angles in a parallelogram are supplementary. This means that the sum of two adjacent angles in a parallelogram is always 180 degrees. This property follows from the fact that opposite angles in a parallelogram are congruent.
The sum of the internal angles in a parallelogram is 360 degrees. Since there are two equal pairs of angles measuring the same, then each of the second pair of angles is equal to (360 - (35 x 2)) / 2 = 145 degrees.
No, because it doesn't equal 360 degrees
They measure 105 degrees each.
No, only in a square (regular parallelogram).The opposite angles are EQUAL in a parallelogram, and the adjacent angles are SUPPLEMENTARY(they equal 180 degrees).So if any angle in a parallelogram is a right angle, they all are. Otherwise, there are no right angles.The angles of a parallelogram will average 90 degrees, as there are 360 degrees in any quadrilateral, (360/4 - 90) and 180 degrees in two adjacent non-equal angles (180/2 = 90).
360 degrees. This complies with the rules of parallelograms. A parallelogram is a quadrilateral comprised of two sets of parallel lines. The opposite sides of a parallelogram are congruent, meaning that they have the same shape and size. The opposite angles are also congruent. Additionally, its consecutive angles are supplementary. This means that when when you add the two angles next to each other together, they will add up to 180 degrees, or a straight line. Since there are 4 corners in a parallelogram, and therefore 4 angles, you would have two sets of 180 degrees. Ergo, the angles in a parallelogram always add up to 360 degrees.