A kite has 4 right angles (all angles of the kite are right angles), since the kite is parallel. If the kite was cyclic, then 2 right angles. And if normal kite, then 0 right angles.
0 right angles
4 angles
A kite need not have any right angles.It can have no right angles (the most common type of kite);It can have 1 right angle (where the two shorter sides, or the two longer sides meet); orIt can have 2 right angles (one between the two shorter sides, and one between the two longer sides)If it has 4 right angles it degenerates into a Rhombus as all four sides must be equal in length; but this rhombus with all four angles equal (at 90°) is called a Square.
A quadrilateral kite can have two obtuse angles and two acute angles that add up to 360 degrees.
A kite has 4 right angles (all angles of the kite are right angles), since the kite is parallel. If the kite was cyclic, then 2 right angles. And if normal kite, then 0 right angles.
0 right angles
4 angles
4 angles
no, it crosses many angles 11 year Rex
A kite has 4 sides and 4 angles.
A kite need not have any right angles.It can have no right angles (the most common type of kite);It can have 1 right angle (where the two shorter sides, or the two longer sides meet); orIt can have 2 right angles (one between the two shorter sides, and one between the two longer sides)If it has 4 right angles it degenerates into a Rhombus as all four sides must be equal in length; but this rhombus with all four angles equal (at 90°) is called a Square.
A kite is a 4 sided quadrilateral and its 4 interior angles add up to 360 degrees, as in all quadrilaterals. The two diagonals lie at right-angles to each other.
2
A quadrilateral kite can have two obtuse angles and two acute angles that add up to 360 degrees.
One pair of opposite angles are equal in a kite and its 4 interior angles add up to 360 degrees.
1 pair of 2 angles