No because the 4 interior angles of any 4 sided quadrilateral always add up to 360 degrees.
A quadrilateral is a shape with four sides... It doesn't have *one* angle. The sum of the interior angles of a quadrilateral will always be 360 degrees, however, it is impossible to know the value an individual angle of a quadrilateral with the information given.
Any angle <360 degrees is possible, though it would be a concave quadrilateral if the angle were greater than 180 deg.
No because the 4 interior angles of a quadrilateral add up to 360 degrees
Possibly in the form of an arrowhead providing that its 4 interior angles add up to 360 degrees
The angles of a quadrilateral add to 360 degrees.
Quadrilaterals have a constant total angle measurement of 360 degrees
A quadrilateral is a shape with four sides... It doesn't have *one* angle. The sum of the interior angles of a quadrilateral will always be 360 degrees, however, it is impossible to know the value an individual angle of a quadrilateral with the information given.
20 degrees
For any quadrilateral (i.e. 4-sided figure), the angles will add up to 360 degrees. Since an obtuse angle is any angle with a measurement over 90 degrees, it is possible to have a quadrilateral with 3 obtuse angles. The fourth angle, however, must be acute (i.e. smaller than 90 degrees). Having 3 obtuse angles is not a requirement, however, for a quadrilateral.
Any angle <360 degrees is possible, though it would be a concave quadrilateral if the angle were greater than 180 deg.
To find the measurement of the fourth angle in a quadrilateral when three angles are given, you can use the property that the sum of all angles in a quadrilateral is always 360 degrees. Given that the three angles are 90, 145, and 78 degrees, you can add these together and subtract the sum from 360 to find the measurement of the fourth angle. Therefore, the fourth angle would be 360 - (90 + 145 + 78) = 47 degrees.
Sum of angles in a quadrilateral is 360° Three angles sum to 80° + 120° + 65° = 265° Therefore the missing fourth angle is 360° - 265° = 95°
is an exterior angle of a quadrilateral always sometime or never 90 degrees
360 - (80 + 120 + 65) ie 95o
Yes, it is possible to draw a quadrilateral with a reflex angle and an obtuse angle. A reflex angle measures more than 180 degrees, while an obtuse angle measures between 90 and 180 degrees. To create a quadrilateral with these angles, you can draw a shape with one reflex angle (greater than 180 degrees) and one obtuse angle (between 90 and 180 degrees), along with two acute angles (less than 90 degrees).
The following are angles in a convex quadrilateral: Angle A = 80 degrees Angle B = 98 degree Angle C = 70 degrees What is the measure of the missing angle?
Not possible... The internal angles of a quadrilateral always total 360. If you MUST have an angle of 90 degrees - the remaining angles must total 270. At least one of the remaining angles will always be obtuse.