No.
No. The sum of the measures of the angles of a triangle must equal 180 degrees. 45+35+60=140, so these angles can't form a triangle.
45.9 as a decimal is in its simplest form . 45 9/10 as a fraction is in its simplest form .
An octagon cannot have 45-degree angles; the internal angles of a regular octagon are each 135 degrees. However, if you want to create an octagonal shape with 45-degree angles, you would need to design an irregular octagon. To form a shape with alternating 45-degree angles, you could use a series of straight lines that connect at 45-degree angles, ensuring that the overall shape closes back on itself to create eight sides.
It can have, but only if the two smaller angles are 45 degrees, then there is symmetry about the centre-line.
45/50 = 9/10
Yes because angles on a straight line add up to 180 degrees
If you are asking if they form a 180o angle, the answer is yes.
It takes four times because 45+45=90+45=135+45=180. So all of those angles can make a straight line.
10 rays can meet in 45 vertices. At each such vertex there will be 4 angles which makes 180 angles in all.
10 collinear points form one set of overlapping line segments, of which there are 45.
1 (APEX) A triangle is formed by three lines. If the ends of two lines meet to form a right-angle (90 degrees), the third line can only form angles less than 90 degrees. 90 + 45 + 45 = 180 the three angles must total 180 degrees.
No. The sum of the measures of the angles of a triangle must equal 180 degrees. 45+35+60=140, so these angles can't form a triangle.
10/45 = 2/9
Simplest form of 10 over 45 is 2/9
45.9 as a decimal is in its simplest form . 45 9/10 as a fraction is in its simplest form .
An octagon cannot have 45-degree angles; the internal angles of a regular octagon are each 135 degrees. However, if you want to create an octagonal shape with 45-degree angles, you would need to design an irregular octagon. To form a shape with alternating 45-degree angles, you could use a series of straight lines that connect at 45-degree angles, ensuring that the overall shape closes back on itself to create eight sides.
No. For example, say the two angles are 10° and 20°. Then the other angle is 180°-10°-20°=150° and that is not a right angle. But if the triangle has two equal acute angles of 45 degrees then the 3rd angle must be 90 degrees which will form a right angle triangle.