yes
A square or an oblong both have 4 right angles, the maximum possible.
An oblong is a rectangle. However, an oblong is not a square. Both are rectangles because they both have 4 right angles, but a square is equal-sided and an oblong isn't.
An oblong is a rectangle because it is a quadrilateral with 4 right-angles. A square is also a rectangle, albeit with all its sides equal in length.
An oblong is a rectangle with unequal adjacent sides, which means all angles are right angles (90 degrees). Therefore, an oblong does not have any acute angles, as acute angles are defined as angles less than 90 degrees.
Two sets of parallel lines meeting at right angles.
A square or an oblong both have 4 right angles, the maximum possible.
An oblong is another term for a rectangle therefore it has four right angles.
An oblong is a rectangle. However, an oblong is not a square. Both are rectangles because they both have 4 right angles, but a square is equal-sided and an oblong isn't.
No, an oblong can't have acute angles, because oblong is another name for a rectangle. A rectangle has four interior right angles of 90 degrees.
A rectangle or oblong
An oblong is a rectangle because it is a quadrilateral with 4 right-angles. A square is also a rectangle, albeit with all its sides equal in length.
An oblong is a rectangle with unequal adjacent sides, which means all angles are right angles (90 degrees). Therefore, an oblong does not have any acute angles, as acute angles are defined as angles less than 90 degrees.
An oblong is another name for a rectangle which has 4 interior angles each measuring 90 degrees
A square or an oblong. Hope this helped
Two sets of parallel lines meeting at right angles.
By definition, an oblong is "a quadrilateral with four right angles and two pairs of parallel lines of different lengths." A rectangle, which has a length that is more than the breadth, is an example of an oblong. By contrast, a square, is not an oblong as it has all the sides equal.
Yes