No because the interior angles of a four sided shape can't exceed 360 degrees.
A shape that has 2 right angles, 1 acute angle, and 2 obtuse angles is a quadrilateral. One possible example is a right trapezoid, where two angles are right angles, one angle is acute, and the last angle is obtuse. This combination of angles can create various quadrilateral shapes, but they must maintain the sum of interior angles equal to 360 degrees.
This question is impossible to answer there is no bigger angles than a right which are called obtuse angles and are definitely impossible
A shape with five sides, one right angle, and one obtuse angle is known as a pentagon. Specifically, it can be an irregular pentagon, where the right angle is 90 degrees and the obtuse angle is greater than 90 degrees but less than 180 degrees. The remaining angles can be acute or right angles, as long as the total sum of the interior angles equals 540 degrees.
A rhombus.
It can take the shape of 2 right angles, 1 acute angle and 1 obtuse angle that all add up to 360 degrees
no....
A shape that has 2 right angles, 1 acute angle, and 2 obtuse angles is a quadrilateral. One possible example is a right trapezoid, where two angles are right angles, one angle is acute, and the last angle is obtuse. This combination of angles can create various quadrilateral shapes, but they must maintain the sum of interior angles equal to 360 degrees.
This question is impossible to answer there is no bigger angles than a right which are called obtuse angles and are definitely impossible
you cannot make a regular shape which has 3 right angles only, you will always end up with 4 right angles
no
A shape with five sides, one right angle, and one obtuse angle is known as a pentagon. Specifically, it can be an irregular pentagon, where the right angle is 90 degrees and the obtuse angle is greater than 90 degrees but less than 180 degrees. The remaining angles can be acute or right angles, as long as the total sum of the interior angles equals 540 degrees.
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).
A rhombus.
It can take the shape of 2 right angles, 1 acute angle and 1 obtuse angle that all add up to 360 degrees
octagon
A right angled trapezoid would fit this description.
There is no polygonal shape which has exactly those angles. It is possible for a concave polygon with 6 or more vertices to have the given angles.