Not sure
I think obtus is smaller than right angle (90°) and acute is bigger.
If the other angle is smaller than the right angle, it is an acute angle.If the other angle is the same as the right angle, it is a right angle.If the other angle is bigger than the right angle but smaller than two right angles, it is an obtuse angle.If the other angle is the same as two right angles, it is a straight angle.If the other angle is bigger than two right angle but smaller than four right angles, it is a reflex angle.After four right angles, the other angle starts back at being an acute angle.
It is bigger
Smaller. If you have trouble understanding that, then pad out 0.8 with an extra zero and make it 0.80. That is the same thing. Thus 0.75 is smaller than 0.80.
If the length of each side of the bigger squares is x times the length of the side of the smaller square, then the area of the bigger square is x2 times the area of the smaller square.
You multiply
No, you multiply.
This is a simple algebra problem. Let A = smaller angle, B = larger angle B = 2*A -5 Substituting B = 90 - A, 90 - A = 2*A -5 3*A = 95 A = 31 2/3, B = 58 1/3
They are both either bigger or smaller than a right angle
No, because complementary angles are two angles whose sum is 90 degrees.An obtuse angle is greater than 90 degrees and less than 180 degrees.
No, angles smaller than 90 degrees are acute, angles bigger than 90 degrees are obtuse, angles that are 90 degrees exactly are right-angles, and angles larger than 180 degrees are reflex angles.
It is an angle that is bigger than 180 degrees and smaller than 360 degrees inside of a shape
I think obtus is smaller than right angle (90°) and acute is bigger.
there are many units for measurements .three measurements are bigger than a kilometer are miles , light years and megameters .
all angles that are more then 180 degrees. * * * * * No, angles which arer more than 180 degrees are called reflex angles. An obtuse angle is one whose measure is between 90 and 180 degrees. It is, therefore, always smaller than 180 degrees.
It does not necessarily prove congruence but it does prove similarity. You can have a smaller or bigger triangle that has the same interior angles.
Yes. In the regular polygon, the angles are all equal parts of the 1,080 . In the irregular one, there are bigger and smaller interior angles, but they still add up to the same total.