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No. In fact, they never are. A right angle by definition is 90 degrees. An obtuse angle is any degree greater than 90. In order for two angles to be supplementary, they must equal 180 degrees. Because an obtuse angle is always greater than 90 degrees, and a right angle is always 90 degrees, an obtuse angle and a right angle can never be supplementary.
nope, never. think about it, if the angles of a triangle always add up to 180 degrees, a right triangle is 90 degrees, and an obtuse angle is over 90 degrees. anything over 90 degrees plus 90 will exceed 180 degrees. Actually you can on a sphere
hot very very hot
Nope. It is complementary angles that add to 90 degrees.
A right angle
north and south pole
is an exterior angle of a quadrilateral always sometime or never 90 degrees
No. In fact, they never are. A right angle by definition is 90 degrees. An obtuse angle is any degree greater than 90. In order for two angles to be supplementary, they must equal 180 degrees. Because an obtuse angle is always greater than 90 degrees, and a right angle is always 90 degrees, an obtuse angle and a right angle can never be supplementary.
nope, never. think about it, if the angles of a triangle always add up to 180 degrees, a right triangle is 90 degrees, and an obtuse angle is over 90 degrees. anything over 90 degrees plus 90 will exceed 180 degrees. Actually you can on a sphere
Yes, because 85 degrees is hot enough to wera shorts because its only 5 degrees away from 90 and 90 drgrees is hot
No. in a rhombus the angles are not 90 degrees. also in a parallelogram they are not 90 degrees
hot very very hot
the degree of a right angle will always be 90 degrees.
90 0F is 32,2 0C; it is a temperature for a summer day, a hot day.
A rhombus is sometimes a square but a square is always a rhombus. A square is a rhombus with all angles equal to 90 degrees.
Sometimes when its vertex angle is 90 degrees and the other 2 angles each measure 45 degrees
You don't, 90 degrees will always be measure in degrees