A trapezoid can have a maximum of 2 obtuse angles. An obtuse angle is one that measures greater than 90 degrees. In a trapezoid, two of the angles are acute angles (less than 90 degrees) and the other two angles can be either acute or obtuse.
It can have any obtuse angle greater than 90 and less than 180 degrees but all 4 interior angles of a trapezoid must add up to 360 degrees.
A trapezoid and a rhombus are examples of shapes with more than one obtuse angle.
Two angles that are more than 90° and less than 180°.
They can vary in size. In its most general form, a trapezoid (or trapezium, outside of North America) is a four-sided figure with exactly one pair of parallel sides. The two parallel sides do not have to be the same length; therefore a trapezoid will have either:Two acute angles (less than 90º) and two obtuse angles (greater than 90º) ORTwo right angles, one acute angle, and one obtuse angle.Case (2) is a special type of Case (1).Regardless of its configuration, the interior angles of a trapezoid always add up to 360 degrees
A trapezoid can have a maximum of 2 obtuse angles. An obtuse angle is one that measures greater than 90 degrees. In a trapezoid, two of the angles are acute angles (less than 90 degrees) and the other two angles can be either acute or obtuse.
an octagon
No because the 4 interior angles of any quadrilateral, which a trapezoid comes under, add up to 360 degrees and 4 obtuse angles would be greater than 360 degrees
It can have any obtuse angle greater than 90 and less than 180 degrees but all 4 interior angles of a trapezoid must add up to 360 degrees.
The shape could be a parallelogram (including a rhombus). Some kites would satisfy these requirements. And it is, of course, possible to have a shape with 5 or more vertices (i.e. more than 4 angles) that contains two acute and two obtuse angles.
A trapezoid and a rhombus are examples of shapes with more than one obtuse angle.
No, a trapezoid cannot have four obtuse angles. Since it is a quadrilateral, the sum of the angles must equal 360 degrees. To be considered obtuse, an angle must be greater than 90 degrees. If all four exceeded 90 degrees, the total would exceed 360.
In its most general form, a trapezoid (or trapezium, outside of North America) is a four-sided figure with exactly one pair of parallel sides. The two parallel sides do not have to be the same length; therefore a trapezoid will have either:Two acute angles (less than 90º) and two obtuse angles (greater than 90º) ORTwo right angles, one acute angle, and one obtuse angle.Case (2) is a special type of Case (1).
A trapezoid can have at most one angle greater than 90 degrees. This angle is typically referred to as an obtuse angle. The other three angles in a trapezoid are acute angles, meaning they are less than 90 degrees.
Obtuse angles are no more important than acute or right angles. The commonest tessellation uses squares (or rectangles) and these have right angles - not obtuse.
A trapezoid can have these specifications. 90 degrees by 90 degrees by n degrees<90degrees by n degrees>90degrees. The total of the trapezoid's angles must be 360 degrees.
octagon, trapezoid, pentagon...* * * * *Not true.A trapezium (or trapeziod) must have at least one acute angle.Any regular polygon with 5 or more sides has all obtuse angles. However, an irregular polygon can always have one or more non-obtuse angles (acute, right or even reflex).