no it has 0
No, one example is a kite that DOES NOT have two right angles. It is not a cyclic quadrilateral. A kite that does have two right angles is one.
Both a 'kite' shape and a right-angled trapezium can have exactly two right angles
A kite has two pairs of adjacent sides congruent. The diagonals intersect at right angles and bisect one set of angles.
If only right angles, then the answer is squares and rectangles. If one or more right angles, the answer will include trapezium, kite and any (irregular) polygon with 5 or more sides. A single triangle can have only one right angle, but several triangles can have right angles, (sorry, that's purely a linguistic argument).
In a kite one pair of opposite angles are equal and all 4 angles add up to 360 degrees and its diagonals intersect each other at right angles.
They are unequal in length but one of the bisects the other at right angles.
A kite need not have any right angles.It can have no right angles (the most common type of kite);It can have 1 right angle (where the two shorter sides, or the two longer sides meet); orIt can have 2 right angles (one between the two shorter sides, and one between the two longer sides)If it has 4 right angles it degenerates into a Rhombus as all four sides must be equal in length; but this rhombus with all four angles equal (at 90°) is called a Square.
It may have 5 angles of 90o and one of 270o Ans:- 5
No. A kite has four angles so that makes 2 pairs of opposite angles.
A shape that has 2 pairs of equal sides and no right angles is a kite or a parallelogram. In a parallelogram, each side is equal to the one directly opposite; in a kite, the equal sides are adjacent to one another.
Kite* * * * *No. On two counts:Only one of the diagonals is bisected.They meet at right angles.The correct answer is a parallelogram.
One pair of opposite angles are equal in a kite and its 4 interior angles add up to 360 degrees.