Draw something like you would draw a 'stick house'. It will have a square for the bottom, and a triangle for the roof. Then 'chop off' part of the top of the roof with a horizontal line segment. Erase the line between the roof and the main part of the house.
It is now a six sided polygon. The two right angles are at the base of the 'house'.
If 1 or 2 of the obtuse angles are 'bent into' the hexagon then you can do it.A hexagon has 720° sum of interior angles. If you have 2 right angles, then that's 180°, leaving 540° to be distributed over four angles. If the two acute angles are 89°, then that leaves 362° to be divided between two angles, so at least one of these two angles will need to be greater than 180°. Below is my text graphics attempt of one possibility (ignore the 'dot'). Note that both of the obtuse angles are greater than 180°:|\_/||__.|Look at the related link to play with different angle possibilities for polygons.
It is a hexagon with two right angles: there is no special name for such a shape.
Yes if it is an irregular hexagon
Yes, it is.
It is impossible to do this. The measures of all of the interior angles in a hexagon add up to 360 degrees, so for there to be four right angles the other two angles would have to be zero, which isn't possible. Visit the Related Link below for an image. The right angles in this image are numbered. Remember that hexagons are six-sided polygons.
A hexagon with two reflex angles opposite one another will have two diagonals that lie entirely outside the hexagon and one that is partly outside.
The answer will depend on whether the two right angles are adjacent, alternate or opposite and also on the measures of the remaining angles.
it is not possible
On a 2-dimensional plane surface, the answer is NO!!!! The sum of the three angles is ALWAYS 180 degrees. However, when drawn on a 3-dimensional surface, such as sphere, then YES. Taking the Earth as an example, from the North Pole draw two meridians, 90 degrees apart. Carry these meridians to the Equator. Both these meridians will intersect the Equator at 90 degrees. Hence The triangle will have three(3) 90 degrees angles. Equals 270 degrees.
It's a square.
No it is not possible to draw 1 triangle with 2 right angles because the angles in a triangle should equal to 180 degrees
Answera polygon that has two right angles and one set of parallel lines is a hexagon