Oh, dude, a reflex angle is greater than 180 degrees, so if you draw one arm of the angle straight, the other arm would have to be pointing backwards, which is like, not really a thing in normal geometry. So, technically, no, you can't have a straight angle and a reflex angle sharing an arm. But hey, if you're feeling creative, go for it, who am I to stop you?
A reflex angle.
On the basis of the limited information provided, the only possible answer is a reflex angle.
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It could be a right angle or a reflex angle
straight angle
yes
Yes
yes. if the reflex angle is 260 degrees, the other is 100 which is obtuse
A reflex angle.
No, 180 degrees is a straight angle. A reflex angle is one whose value is between 180 and 360 degrees.
Acute or obtuse: Yes. Straight: No.
A straight angle is an angle that measures exactly 180°A reflex angle is an angle that measures more than 180°, but measures less than 360°.Edit: I really like that answer that the controbuter did above ^. I just wanted to add something. A straight angle is an angle that is straight. A reflex angle would be an angle larger than a straight angle. It's an angle that's in the opposite side of a right angle or an acute.
Straight angle
No, it is not possible to draw a reflex angle where the other angle formed by the arm is acute. A reflex angle measures between 180 and 360 degrees, while an acute angle measures less than 90 degrees. Therefore, the other angle formed by the arm in a reflex angle scenario would have to be obtuse, measuring between 90 and 180 degrees.
Obtuse, straight, reflex.
An angle from 181 degrees to 359 degrees is called a reflex angle. A reflex angle is an angle that measures greater than 180 degrees but less than 360 degrees. It is formed by rotating a ray less than one full revolution, resulting in an angle that extends beyond a straight line.
A reflex angle