Yes.
A trapezoid can have up to two right, 90 degree angles for it still to be classified as a trapezoid.
____________ / | /_____________ | Crappy drawing, I know, but a right trapezoid has two right angles(right side of picture), and two supplimentary non-right angles(left side of drawing). This is still a trapezoid because in order to be a trapezoid, there must be one and only one pair of parallel lines, and four sides. That's it, thus this is a possible trapezoid.
That would be a trapezoid. A trapezoid does not have to have two right angles it only needs to have two parallel sides. There is not a name for the exact quadrilateral you are looking for but the shape is still within the definition of a trapezoid.
You can have two right angles and still be only a trapezoid. With three right angles then it would be a rectangle.
Yes, an isosceles trapezoid can have at least one right angle. In such a trapezoid, the non-parallel sides are equal in length, and if one of the angles between a base and a non-parallel side is a right angle, the trapezoid will still maintain its isosceles properties. This configuration results in a trapezoid that is both isosceles and contains a right angle.
it doesn't normally but it can and still be a trapezoid
There are actually two answers. parallelogram and trapezoid. No. wait, a square or rectangle is a parallelogram, so I can't rule out that entire class. I guess you are left with trapezoid. Oh wait, a trapezoid can have two right angles and still fit the definition, so I can't rule out that entire class. A non-right triangular section would fit. A non-right trapezoid would be the same thing, I guess. A non-right parallelogram would also work.
No, a trapezoid cannot have two acute angles and two obtuse angles. By definition, a trapezoid has only one pair of parallel sides. In a trapezoid, the non-parallel sides are always supplementary, meaning they add up to 180 degrees. Therefore, having two obtuse angles would make it impossible for the other two angles to be acute and still satisfy the properties of a trapezoid.
you can't a trapezoid can never really have a right angle if it does it is no real trapezoid. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- all the way -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ___ Actually you can. Instead of having to angled sides: / \ ___ You make it be: | \ It's still a trapezoid but an irregular one. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
It is still a trapezium (trapezoid) with a right angle.It does not have any special name which is dependent on its size.
its a trapezoid. the slant doesn't necessarily have to be on the right hand side, both sides can be slanted and it would still be a trapezoid.
Not all of them have 4 right angles for example a rhombus does not have any right angles, yet it is still a parellegram so parellegrams don't always need to have 4 right angles.