If two of the angles of a parallelogram are acute, then the other two angles will be obtuse. Since a parallelogram contains two pairs of parallel sides, both of the acute angles and both of the obtuse angles respectively will measure the same.
The other angles are 145°, 35°, and 145°.
The term parallelogram refers to a four sided geometrical figure (in other words, a quadrilateral) in which there are two sets of parallel sides. The angles can vary; they can be right angles, or they can be acute or obtuse angles, as long as there are two sets of parallel sides. Angles are not said to be vertical to each other. Angles can be perpendicular to each other, but not vertical or horizontal. If angles are perpendicular, then they are right angles, in other words, 90o angles. Lines can be vertical, but angles can't.
A rhombus has two opposing acute angles (less than 90º) and two opposing obtuse (greater than 90º) angles, with the opposing sides being parallel and the sides being of equal length. A parallelogram can have the two acute angles and two obtuse angles, but have sides of different lengths. That is: two opposing sides shorter than the other two opposing sides. All angles total 360º
angles diagnal from each other in a parallelogram are congruent for shape be parallelogram, all sides must be parallel
No. In fact, if one of the angles is not acute (a right angle or obtuse), the other two must be acute.
Well, honey, a parallelogram has a grand total of zero acute angles. It's all about those congruent opposite angles being the same size, which means they're either both obtuse or both acute. So, if you're looking for acute angles, you better go find yourself a different shape to play with.
The other angles are 145°, 35°, and 145°.
With 2 acute and 2 obtuse angles it has 4 angles - the shape is a quadrilateral. The shape can be one of trapezium, parallelogram, rhombus, kite or a general quadrilateral. With the two acute angles next to each other (forcing the two obtuse angles to be next to each other) the shape can be either a trapezium or a general quadrilateral.
The term parallelogram refers to a four sided geometrical figure (in other words, a quadrilateral) in which there are two sets of parallel sides. The angles can vary; they can be right angles, or they can be acute or obtuse angles, as long as there are two sets of parallel sides. Angles are not said to be vertical to each other. Angles can be perpendicular to each other, but not vertical or horizontal. If angles are perpendicular, then they are right angles, in other words, 90o angles. Lines can be vertical, but angles can't.
Yes. In a non-trivial rhombus (ie one that is not a square), a pair of opposite angles is acute and the other pair is obtuse.
A rhombus has two opposing acute angles (less than 90º) and two opposing obtuse (greater than 90º) angles, with the opposing sides being parallel and the sides being of equal length. A parallelogram can have the two acute angles and two obtuse angles, but have sides of different lengths. That is: two opposing sides shorter than the other two opposing sides. All angles total 360º
Being a quadrilateral, the sum of all four angles is 360o.Opposite angles of a parallelogram are equal.Adjacent angles of a parallelogram are supplementary, that is add to 180o.Given one angle of a parallelogram, the other 3 angles can be calculated:the opposite angle is the same;the other two angles are the same as each other and are 180o - the_given_angle
The question does not really make sense. Once might ask, "Are consecutive angles in a parallelogram complementary?" in which case the answer is no. Complementary angles are angles which add up to 90 degrees. Consecutive angles are angles next to each other (or follow each other). In a parallelogram, consecutive angles are supplementary (add to 180 degrees). In a parallelogram, opposite angles are equal. You could have a parallelogram where two angles are 45 degree (and thus complementary) and then the other two angles would be 135 degrees.
Actually, you cannot conclude anything this way, at least not in regular geometry. For instance, in a "perfect triangle," all 3 angles are acute. In a right triangle, one is a right angle and the other two are acute. It is also possible to have an obtuse angle and two acute angles. The thing is, the 3 angles must add up to 180 degrees.
In a right angled triangle the two other angles are acute.
In a right angled triangle the two other angles are acute.
angles diagnal from each other in a parallelogram are congruent for shape be parallelogram, all sides must be parallel