a trapezoid has no right angles whatsoever. no they cant because trapezoids have only 4 sides and dented
No because the 4th angle would have to be 90 degrees.
A trapezium can have at most two right angles. But it need not have any.It is a quadrilateral and so the sum of its four angles must be 360 degrees. If there are 3 right angles then they sum to 3*90 = 270 degrees and so the fourth must be 360-270 = 90 degrees. Therefore it has four right angles and then is no longer a trapezium but a rectangle!
A trapezoid can't have three right angles. A quadrilateral with three right angles must have a total of four right angles, since a quadrilateral's interior angles add up to 360. 360 - (3*90) = 90, so the fourth angle would have to be right as well. A quadrilateral with four right angles is not a trapezoid; instead it is a rectangle or a square.
No.
1 A square 2 A rectangle 3 A right angle trapezoid 4 An irregular pentagon 5 The diagonals of a rhombus 6 The diagonals of a kite
No, a trapezoid cannot have three right angles. A trapezoid has at least one pair of parallel sides, and if it has three right angles, the fourth angle would also need to be a right angle to make the total 360 degrees. This would make it a rectangle instead of a trapezoid.
No because the 4th angle would have to be 90 degrees.
No but it can have 2 right angles with 1 obtuse angle and 1 acute angle that add up to 360 degrees
No, it is not possible to draw a trapezoid with three right angles. A trapezoid is defined as a quadrilateral with at least one pair of parallel sides. If three angles are right angles, the fourth angle would need to be a right angle as well to satisfy the angle sum property of quadrilaterals, which would make all four angles right angles, resulting in a rectangle rather than a trapezoid.
Nope. A trapezoid has 4 sides, but only 2 of the sides are parallel. If there were 3 right angles, the 4th angle would also have to be a right angle, and both opposing sides would be parallel.
A trapezium can have at most two right angles. But it need not have any.It is a quadrilateral and so the sum of its four angles must be 360 degrees. If there are 3 right angles then they sum to 3*90 = 270 degrees and so the fourth must be 360-270 = 90 degrees. Therefore it has four right angles and then is no longer a trapezium but a rectangle!
The figure described is a quadrilateral known as a right-angled trapezoid. It has three right angles (90 degrees) and one angle that is less than a right angle (acute) and one angle that is greater than a right angle (obtuse). This configuration allows the sum of the angles to equal 360 degrees, satisfying the angle sum property of a quadrilateral.
no
A trapezoid can't have three right angles. A quadrilateral with three right angles must have a total of four right angles, since a quadrilateral's interior angles add up to 360. 360 - (3*90) = 90, so the fourth angle would have to be right as well. A quadrilateral with four right angles is not a trapezoid; instead it is a rectangle or a square.
No.
Yes, a trapezoid can have 3 right angles.
No.No.No.No.