The answer will depend on what x is: another angle, or length of side or median or whatever. Since you cannot be bothered to provide that information, I cannot provide a sensible answer.
As many as you like because any triangle that has a 90 degree angle is always a right angle triangle.
The side of a triangle that is opposite to 90 degree angle is called hypotenuse. The side that is opposite to the given angle (The angle that is under calculations) is called opposite. The side that is adjacent with the given angle is called base.
The measure of only one angle and one side is not sufficient to calculate the lengths of the sides of a triangle. If you have one more angle or one more side you can use the sine rule.
The sum of a triangle's angles must always equal 180, so 54+62=116. 180-116=64. The third angle is a 64 degree angle.
No because the 3 angles of a triangle add up to 180 degrees and the given 2 angles already add up to 180 degrees
As many as you like because any triangle that has a 90 degree angle is always a right angle triangle.
The side of a triangle that is opposite to 90 degree angle is called hypotenuse. The side that is opposite to the given angle (The angle that is under calculations) is called opposite. The side that is adjacent with the given angle is called base.
The measure of only one angle and one side is not sufficient to calculate the lengths of the sides of a triangle. If you have one more angle or one more side you can use the sine rule.
If it's a right angle triangle and an acute angle plus the length of a leg is given then use trigonometry to find the hypotenuse.
The sum of a triangle's angles must always equal 180, so 54+62=116. 180-116=64. The third angle is a 64 degree angle.
No because the 3 angles of a triangle add up to 180 degrees and the given 2 angles already add up to 180 degrees
No. Given a triangle with only the right angle and the hypotenuse, you cannot calculate the other sides nor the other angles.
I could solve this if I knew what kind of triangle this was. Equilateral, Right: 30, 60, 90?
67 degrees
As the relationship between the length and angle given are unclear a graphic explanation can be found at the link below
It is an isosceles triangle and the 3rd angle is 72 degrees.
The dimensions given fit that of a right angle triangle