A pentagon maybe even A polygon
No, a trapezoid does not have four obtuse angles. A trapezoid has one pair of parallel sides and the other pair of non-parallel sides. The angles of a trapezoid can be a combination of acute, obtuse, and right angles, but it cannot have four obtuse angles.
this figure has 2 obtuse angles and two acute angles. also the opposite sides are parallel.
It could be a trapezoid providing that the other two angles are acute and obtuse
A Hexagon has 3 pairs of parallel line and all angles are obtuse.
The figure that has 4 pairs of parallel lines and 8 obtuse angles is a rectangular shape known as a rhombus. A rhombus is a quadrilateral with all sides of equal length and opposite angles of equal measure. In a rhombus, each pair of opposite sides are parallel to each other, resulting in 4 pairs of parallel lines. Additionally, since a rhombus has 4 angles greater than 90 degrees, it will have a total of 8 obtuse angles.
Rhombus ; Internal 2 acute and two obtuse angles; four sides of equal length, opposite sides are parallel. Rectangle ; Internal angles are all 90 degrees(right angles), opposite sides of equal length and parallel. Adjacent sides are of different length.
A pentagon maybe even A polygon
No, a trapezoid does not have four obtuse angles. A trapezoid has one pair of parallel sides and the other pair of non-parallel sides. The angles of a trapezoid can be a combination of acute, obtuse, and right angles, but it cannot have four obtuse angles.
this figure has 2 obtuse angles and two acute angles. also the opposite sides are parallel.
It could be a trapezoid providing that the other two angles are acute and obtuse
A Hexagon has 3 pairs of parallel line and all angles are obtuse.
Angles are usually illustrated as two acute and two obtuse, but there can be two right, one acute and one obtuse. Angles cannot be parallel since that is a characteristic of lines, not angles!
In its most general form, a trapezoid (or trapezium, outside of North America) is a four-sided figure with exactly one pair of parallel sides. The two parallel sides do not have to be the same length; therefore a trapezoid will have either:Two acute angles (less than 90º) and two obtuse angles (greater than 90º) ORTwo right angles, one acute angle, and one obtuse angle.Case (2) is a special type of Case (1).
There is no limit to the number of obtuse angles a figure can have. A regular n-gon has n obtuse angles where n is any positive integer greater than 4.
parallelogram
A rhombus always has four equal sides and two pairs of parallel sides. It may have either two obtuse angles or no obtuse angles. If it has no obtuse angles, then that particular rhombus also qualifies as a square.