No. The sum of the internal angles of a plane triangle is 180 degrees. If one of the angles is 90 degrees or more, this leaves 90 degrees or less to be distributed between the other two angles which will then both be acute.
No because 2 obtuse angles would measure over 180 degrees and the 3 angles of any triangle add up to 180 degrees.
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If you are classifying triangles by their angles, an obtuse triangle has one obtuse angle and two acute angles. A triangle can have at most one obtuse angle. If the two acute angles are congruent, the triangle would also be isosceles.
No because any triangle must have a total of 180 degrees when the angles are added together and with 2 obtuse angles the sum would be greater than 180. A triangle can only ever have one obtuse angle.
All triangles have 3 sides and 3 interior angles that add up to 180 degrees and they are classed as follows:- Right angle triangle:a 90 degree angle and 2 acute angles Scalene triangle: 3 acute angles Obtuse triangle: an obtuse angle and 2 acute angles Isosceles triangle: 2 equal base angles and an apex angle Equilateral triangle: 3 equal angles each measuring 60 degrees
An obtuse triangle does not always have three congruent sides. An obtuse triangle can be any form that always has three angles.
It is an obtuse scalene triangle.