No. A Rhombus has two obtuse angles and two acute angles
A square is a special case of rhombus, where all angles are equal to 90°. So if it's not a square, then the rhombus will have 2 acute angles and 2 obtuse angles.
No but it has 2 equal acute angles and 2 equal obtuse angles
Yes, a rhombus can have both acute and obtuse angles. A rhombus is a quadrilateral with all sides of equal length, but its angles can vary. Since the opposite angles of a rhombus are congruent, if one angle is acute (less than 90 degrees), then the opposite angle will also be acute. Similarly, if one angle is obtuse (greater than 90 degrees), then the opposite angle will also be obtuse.
A rhombus has two pairs of equal angles, the pairs being supplementary. Normally one pair is acute and the other is obtuse. In the special case, all four are right angles and the rhombus becomes a square.
a rhombus
A rhombus has two equal opposite acute angles and two equal opposite obtuse angles with all four angles adding up to 360 degrees.
No, they have two acute angles and two obtuse angles that add up to 360 degrees
A rhombus is a 4 equal sided quadrilateral and has 2 equal opposite acute angles and 2 equal opposite obtuse angles and they all add up to 360 degrees.
It is a rhombus which has 2 equal acute angles and 2 equal obtuse angles
No. Except for the case of a square (a special case of rhombus), a rhombus will have 2 congruent acute angles, and 2 congruent obtuse angles. The square has 4 right angles. In fact, every quadrilateral will have either all 4 angles equal to right angle (square and rectangle), or will have at least 1 obtuse angle (also at least 1 acute).
all cogruent sides 2 acute angles 2 obtuse angles 2 sets of parallel lines the acute angles are 45 degrees the obtuse angles are135 degrees
It is a rhombus