rhombus
quadrilateral means having all sides the same length. when you make a shape with 3 obtuse angles and with the same length on the sides, only 3 of them will have the same length which is the sides of the 3 obtuse angles. then the last side will be too long. obviously it is no more quadrilateral.
A parallelogram is a quadrilateral with opposite sides parallel and congruent.
It is a parallelogram.
The quadrilateral you are describing is a parallelogram. In a parallelogram, opposite sides are parallel and equal in length, but it does not necessarily have right angles; the angles can be acute or obtuse. Examples of such parallelograms include rhombuses and non-right-angled rectangles.
How about a kite which is a 4 sided quadrilateral that can have 2 equal opposite obtuse angles
quadrilateral means having all sides the same length. when you make a shape with 3 obtuse angles and with the same length on the sides, only 3 of them will have the same length which is the sides of the 3 obtuse angles. then the last side will be too long. obviously it is no more quadrilateral.
A parallelogram is a quadrilateral with opposite sides parallel and congruent.
a rhombus or parallelogram
It is a parallelogram.
There can be at most 3 obtuse angles in a quadrilateral.
That would be a parallelogram.
The quadrilateral you are describing is a parallelogram. In a parallelogram, opposite sides are parallel and equal in length, but it does not necessarily have right angles; the angles can be acute or obtuse. Examples of such parallelograms include rhombuses and non-right-angled rectangles.
How about a kite which is a 4 sided quadrilateral that can have 2 equal opposite obtuse angles
Yes, a quadrilateral can have 2 obtuse angles.
no,it can have a maximum of 2 obtuse angles
No a quadrilateral can't have 3 obtuse angles and 1 right angle because if a polygon did have 3 obtuse angles and 1 right angle then it would not even be a quadrilateral.
If the 2 acute angles are equal and the 2 obtuse angles are equal then it could be a 4 sided quadrilateral in the form of a parallelogram or a rhombus