They are obtuse angles.
two 90 degree angles or also known as supplementary angles
It cant be possible because a triangle only consists of 180 degree angles !! As 90 + 90 = 180 thus 2 or more than 2 angles in a triangle cant be right angles i.e. 90 degree :D
Obtuse
Two right angles (90 degrees each) equal 180 degrees (a straight angle).
Complementary angles are 90 degree angles while supplementary angels are 180 degree angles.You remember it by how complementary angle are 90 degrees more to get a supplementary angles.
They are obtuse angles.
no, it makes four 90 degree angles
put the protractor on the vertex and look up at the degree's and look belowacute angle =has a measure between 0 degree's and 90 degree'sright angle =has a measure of 90 degree'sobtuse angle = has a measure between 90 degree's and 180 degree'sstraight angle = has a measure of 180 degree'sthat's how you use a protractor to measure angles.
It's an obtuse angle.Classifcations of angles:Acute angle: Angles that are greater than 0 degrees and less than 90 degrees.Right angle(perpendicular angle): Angles that are 90 degrees.Obtuse angle: Angles that are between 90 degree and 180 degrees.Straight angle: Angles that are 180 degrees.
It is neither, a 180 degree angle is a straight angle. 90 degrees is a right angle. Angles between 90 and 180 degrees are obtuse. Angles over 180 degrees are reflex.
Supplement angles = 180° So 180° - 120° = 60° Complementary angles = 90°
They are not all the same because obtuse angles vary from 90 degree angles to 180 degree angles.
90 degree angles.90 degree angles.90 degree angles.90 degree angles.
NEVER!! A triangle has to have exactly 180 degrees between all three angles. One of the angles could equal 90 degrees, but the whole triangle can't be 90 degrees.
two 90 degree angles or also known as supplementary angles
all angles that are more then 180 degrees. * * * * * No, angles which arer more than 180 degrees are called reflex angles. An obtuse angle is one whose measure is between 90 and 180 degrees. It is, therefore, always smaller than 180 degrees.