Somewhere between a trapezoid and a triangle. Imagine an image where the left edge is perpendicular to the base (right angle), the top declines slightly from left to right (acute angle), and the right side declines sharply from the top (obtuse) to its intersection with the base (acute). Another option would be for the top to incline as it moves away from the side forming the obtuse angle, then the other side declines even more sharply forming acute angles at intersection with the top and bottom.
a right angle, a obtuse angle, and an acute angle.
A traditional kite shape (a point at the top, then widest about 1/3 of the way down, then tapering to another point at the bottom) has one, two or three obtuse (>90 degree) angles. The two angles at the widest point, about 1/3 of the way from the top, are generally obtuse, but don't have to be. The bottom angle is almost never obtuse. The top angle is sometimes obtuse. So if the top angle is obtuse but the side angles are not, a kite shape has one obtuse angle. If the top angle is not, but the side angles are, it has two obtuse angles. If the top and side angles are obtuse it has three.
Four
NO. A trapezoid cannot be a rectangle. If a parallelogram has one right angle then it is a rectangle. A trapezoid doesn't satisfy this condition because a trapezoid is a quadrilateral with exactly one parallel side which means that it doesn't have a right angle.
a trapazoid. Google it for what it looks like.
It is nearly the shape of a square but one side is sloping and I think it is called a trapezoid
Somewhere between a trapezoid and a triangle. Imagine an image where the left edge is perpendicular to the base (right angle), the top declines slightly from left to right (acute angle), and the right side declines sharply from the top (obtuse) to its intersection with the base (acute). Another option would be for the top to incline as it moves away from the side forming the obtuse angle, then the other side declines even more sharply forming acute angles at intersection with the top and bottom.
a right angle, a obtuse angle, and an acute angle.
A traditional kite shape (a point at the top, then widest about 1/3 of the way down, then tapering to another point at the bottom) has one, two or three obtuse (>90 degree) angles. The two angles at the widest point, about 1/3 of the way from the top, are generally obtuse, but don't have to be. The bottom angle is almost never obtuse. The top angle is sometimes obtuse. So if the top angle is obtuse but the side angles are not, a kite shape has one obtuse angle. If the top angle is not, but the side angles are, it has two obtuse angles. If the top and side angles are obtuse it has three.
An obtuse angle
An obtuse angle.
Four
Have four sideshave 360 degrees as interior angle sumalso they have one pair of opposite side equal
No shape does. If it has 4 sides and one pair of parallel lines it cannot have only 1 right angle, it must either have: 1) 2 right angles, 1 acute acute and 1 obtuse angle; or 2) no right angles, 2 acute angles and 2 obtuse angles; in which case it would be a trapezium (trapezoid).
NO. A trapezoid cannot be a rectangle. If a parallelogram has one right angle then it is a rectangle. A trapezoid doesn't satisfy this condition because a trapezoid is a quadrilateral with exactly one parallel side which means that it doesn't have a right angle.
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!