No. A hexagon has 6 sides and 6 vertices (angles). A polygon with four sides and four angles is a quadrilateral.
No, a trapezoid does not have four obtuse angles. A trapezoid has one pair of parallel sides and the other pair of non-parallel sides. The angles of a trapezoid can be a combination of acute, obtuse, and right angles, but it cannot have four obtuse angles.
No, a quadrilateral couldn't have four obtuse angles because the four interior angles of a four-sided quadrilateral add up to 360 degrees, and the sum of the measures of four obtuse angles would be greater than 360 degrees.
no
This would be a trapezoid.
Four exactly? A regular hexagon has 6. But a hexagon can have four obtuse angles. A regular hexagon can be made a lot flatter so that the two angles at the sides become acute, while the remaining 4 are obtuse.
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.
No. A hexagon has 6 sides and 6 vertices (angles). A polygon with four sides and four angles is a quadrilateral.
No, a trapezoid does not have four obtuse angles. A trapezoid has one pair of parallel sides and the other pair of non-parallel sides. The angles of a trapezoid can be a combination of acute, obtuse, and right angles, but it cannot have four obtuse angles.
No, a quadrilateral couldn't have four obtuse angles because the four interior angles of a four-sided quadrilateral add up to 360 degrees, and the sum of the measures of four obtuse angles would be greater than 360 degrees.
no
You start creating a concave hexagon from four triangles by placing the smallest triangle in the middle to serve as a base for the other three. Line up the bases on each triangle with the sides of the smallest one to end up with six sides forming a concave hexagon.
No, a trapezium cannot have four obtuse angles, neither can a trapeizod.
Parallelogram
There are right angles, acute angles, obtuse angles, and straight angles.
Assuming the kite has four sides and is not a square, then yes, it must have obtuse angles.
The four angles are acute, obtuse, right, and Strait!Thank you!-Chloe Sciuto