The answer will depend on the coordinates of the first three corners. But since you have not bothered to share that crucial bit of information, I cannot provide a more useful answer.
The answer will depend on the coordinates of the first three corners. But since you have not bothered to share that crucial bit of information, I cannot provide a more useful answer.
The answer will depend on the coordinates of the first three corners. But since you have not bothered to share that crucial bit of information, I cannot provide a more useful answer.
The answer will depend on the coordinates of the first three corners. But since you have not bothered to share that crucial bit of information, I cannot provide a more useful answer.
There is not enough information to provide an answer. You need to know the coordinates of three vertices before you can find the coordinates of the fourth. Otherwise, there are alternative solutions using translations, reflections and rotations.
dont no stuck on iyt help dont no stuck on iyt help
The sum of the angles in a trapezoid is 360 degrees, therefore, the forth angle in this problem is: 360 - (60+120+80) = 100 degrees
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.
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!
It is a right angle trapezoid
Fourth Corner Exchange was created in 2002.
It depends on what the coordinates of the first three vertices are!
The cast of The Fourth Corner - 2007 includes: Onahoua Rodriguez
No, a trapezoid could not have three right angles. If it did, it would be a rectangle, as the fourth angle would need to be 90 degrees as well. A rectangle is not a trapezoid.
Example sentence - He lived in the fourth house from the corner.
To determine the coordinates of the fourth vertex of a rectangle, you need to know the coordinates of the other three vertices. If you have the coordinates of three vertices, you can find the fourth by using the properties of a rectangle, where opposite sides are equal and the diagonals bisect each other. For example, if the vertices are A(x1, y1), B(x2, y2), and C(x3, y3), you can find the fourth vertex D(x4, y4) through the midpoint formula or by ensuring that the lengths of the sides and the diagonals are consistent. Please provide the coordinates of the existing vertices for a specific answer.
You cannot have a trapezoid with three sides! Or if the question was something like 'You know three of the four sides of a trapezoid' ; that cannot be done either, because there is no way of calculating what the length of the fourth side is.
The negative y coordinates and positive x coordinates lie in the IV quadrant on the Cartesian plane
Up your butt and around the corner
At the store on the corner of fourth and main.
on the fourth corner.