yes, an Isosceles Trapezoid
Yes, a quadrilateral can have 2 obtuse angles.
no,it can have a maximum of 2 obtuse angles
A shape that has 2 right angles, 1 acute angle, and 2 obtuse angles is a quadrilateral. One possible example is a right trapezoid, where two angles are right angles, one angle is acute, and the last angle is obtuse. This combination of angles can create various quadrilateral shapes, but they must maintain the sum of interior angles equal to 360 degrees.
There is no such shape because the 4 angles in a 4 sided quadrilateral must add up to 360 degrees no more and no less . Therefore 2 obtuse angles and 2 right angles are greater than 360 degrees which doesn't quite measure up for the requirements of a 4 sided quadrilateral.
A shape with two obtuse angles is a quadrilateral, specifically a type called a trapezoid (or trapezium in some regions) that can have two obtuse angles. In such a trapezoid, the two non-parallel sides can form obtuse angles with the bases. Additionally, it’s possible to have other irregular polygons with two obtuse angles, depending on their specific configurations.
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.
A shape with 2 acute angles and 2 obtuse angles is typically a quadrilateral. This configuration can create various forms, such as a kite or an irregular quadrilateral, as long as the sum of the angles equals 360 degrees. The presence of both acute and obtuse angles gives the shape a unique appearance, distinguishing it from more regular polygons.
Yes, a quadrilateral can have 2 obtuse angles.
no,it can have a maximum of 2 obtuse angles
A shape that has 2 right angles, 1 acute angle, and 2 obtuse angles is a quadrilateral. One possible example is a right trapezoid, where two angles are right angles, one angle is acute, and the last angle is obtuse. This combination of angles can create various quadrilateral shapes, but they must maintain the sum of interior angles equal to 360 degrees.
There is no such shape because the 4 angles in a 4 sided quadrilateral must add up to 360 degrees no more and no less . Therefore 2 obtuse angles and 2 right angles are greater than 360 degrees which doesn't quite measure up for the requirements of a 4 sided quadrilateral.
Yes
With 4 angles it will be a quadrilateral. Depending upon which angles are acute and which are obtuse and their sizes, and the side lengths it could be:a general quadrilaterala parallelograma rhombusa trapeziuma kite
yes
A shape with two obtuse angles is a quadrilateral, specifically a type called a trapezoid (or trapezium in some regions) that can have two obtuse angles. In such a trapezoid, the two non-parallel sides can form obtuse angles with the bases. Additionally, it’s possible to have other irregular polygons with two obtuse angles, depending on their specific configurations.
Any parallelogram except a rectangle.
yes its a trapezoid