if its not at 90%
You must learn your facts carefully.Firstly a right angle is always equal to 900 and an obtuse angle is always greater than 900 but less than 1800 .
In mathematics, an obtuse angle is defined as an angle greater than 90° and less than 180°. A right angle is 90°. An acute angle is greater than 0°, but less than 90°. Therefore, a 90° right angle plus any acute angle will always fulfill the requirements of an obtuse angle.
No. In fact, they never are. A right angle by definition is 90 degrees. An obtuse angle is any degree greater than 90. In order for two angles to be supplementary, they must equal 180 degrees. Because an obtuse angle is always greater than 90 degrees, and a right angle is always 90 degrees, an obtuse angle and a right angle can never be supplementary.
Yes because an obtuse angle is greater than a right angle
The name of the angle you are looking for is an obtuse angle. For review here are all the names and classifications:Any angle less than 90 degrees is an acute angle.Any angle equal to 90 degrees is a right angle.Any angle greater than 90 degrees but less than 180 degrees is an obtuse angle.Any angle equal to 180 degrees is a straight angle.Any angle greater than 180 degrees but less than 360 degrees is called a reflex angle.
You must learn your facts carefully.Firstly a right angle is always equal to 900 and an obtuse angle is always greater than 900 but less than 1800 .
No. Right triangles are triangles with one angle exactly 90°, and obtuse angles are triangles with exactly one angle that is greater than, but not equal to, 90°.
In mathematics, an obtuse angle is defined as an angle greater than 90° and less than 180°. A right angle is 90°. An acute angle is greater than 0°, but less than 90°. Therefore, a 90° right angle plus any acute angle will always fulfill the requirements of an obtuse angle.
It is: "angle a is not a right angle" or "angle a is greater than or less than a right angle".
No. In fact, they never are. A right angle by definition is 90 degrees. An obtuse angle is any degree greater than 90. In order for two angles to be supplementary, they must equal 180 degrees. Because an obtuse angle is always greater than 90 degrees, and a right angle is always 90 degrees, an obtuse angle and a right angle can never be supplementary.
Yes because an obtuse angle is greater than a right angle
The name of the angle you are looking for is an obtuse angle. For review here are all the names and classifications:Any angle less than 90 degrees is an acute angle.Any angle equal to 90 degrees is a right angle.Any angle greater than 90 degrees but less than 180 degrees is an obtuse angle.Any angle equal to 180 degrees is a straight angle.Any angle greater than 180 degrees but less than 360 degrees is called a reflex angle.
obtuse angle
an obtuse angle :)
Is an obtuse angle
and obtuse angle.
An angle is acut if the internal measurement (the smallest one) is less then, but not equal to, 90 degrees. If the angle is 90 degrees, it is a right angle. If it is greater then 90 degrees, it is obtuse.