Yes
A general quadrilateral or a kite.
A traditional kite shape (a point at the top, then widest about 1/3 of the way down, then tapering to another point at the bottom) has one, two or three obtuse (>90 degree) angles. The two angles at the widest point, about 1/3 of the way from the top, are generally obtuse, but don't have to be. The bottom angle is almost never obtuse. The top angle is sometimes obtuse. So if the top angle is obtuse but the side angles are not, a kite shape has one obtuse angle. If the top angle is not, but the side angles are, it has two obtuse angles. If the top and side angles are obtuse it has three.
A kite could fit the given description.
It ha one right angle, two obtuse angles and one acute angle
Any polygon with 5 sides or more or a trapezoid that doesn't have a right angle in it or a kite that is not a square.
A kite can satisfy those criteria.
Yes, a kite typically has at least one obtuse angle. A kite is a quadrilateral with two distinct pairs of consecutive, congruent sides. In a kite, the angles between the non-congruent sides (the angles opposite the longer and shorter sides) are usually not congruent. One of these angles can be obtuse, depending on the specific shape of the kite. However, it's important to note that a kite can also have acute angles, but it must have at least one obtuse angle.
A trapezium, a kite, a number of miscellaneous quadrilaterals.
no
No, an obtuse triangle can not have more than one obtuse angle. This is because all of the angles have to add up to 180 and the smallest obtuse angle you can have is 91 degrees. So 180-91=89. 89 degrees is the angle that you need to complete the triangle and it is an acute angle. Therefore, you can not have more than one obtuse angle in an obtuse triangle.
i think two well that's what my teacher put