The sum of all the angles in a triangle always adds up to 180 degrees.
A triangle does not have any particular value. There are the magnitudes of its size, its angles, its area, its perimeter etc, but no single VALUE.
All triangles have at least two acute angles so the question does not add any further value.
A triangle in which one angle is equal to 90o is called a right triangle. A triangle in which all sides are equal (or) all the angles are equal to 60o is called an equilateral triangle. A triangle in which any two sides or any two angles are equal is called an isosceles triangle. A triangle in which all the sides or angles are different is called a scalene triangle.
All the angles in ANY triangle [on a plane surface] add up to 180 degrees.
The sum of the 3 angles in any triangle add up to 180 degrees.
That depends on what type of triangle it is but the 3 interior angles of any triangle add up to 180 degrees
Any value between 0 and 180 degrees.
No matter what, all three angles of the triangle will ALWAYS add up to 180 degrees.
A scalene triangle is a triangle in which all the sides are of the same length, and all three angles are equal i.e. all three angles are equal to 600. Therefore a scalene triangle cannot have a right angle.
Any triangle, and all triangles.
The sum of all angles in any type of triangle equals 180'
The most right angles a triangle can possibly have is 1. Any more than that, and it has to be a quadrilateral.