obtuce angle
Obtuse angle.
A rhombus. And, btw, it is obtuse.
acute is the angle that is smaller then 90 degrees obtuce is the anglee that is above 90 degrees
Yes, any second-degree polynomial is quadratic. Degree 0 - constant (8) Degree 1 - linear (n) Degree 2 - quadratic (n^2) Degree 3 - cubic (n^3) Degree 4 - fourth degree (n^4) Degree 5 - fifth degree (n^5) Degree 6 - sixth degree (n^6) and so on............ Also a degree I find funny is the special name for one hundredth degree. Degree 100 - hectic (n^100)
obtuce angle
Obtuse angle.
An obtuse angle is greater than 90 but less than 180 degrees
A rhombus. And, btw, it is obtuse.
Greater than 90 degrees but less than 180 degrees.
It is called an obtuce angle because it looks like this right?: -------------------------_------------------------ or a right angle if it looks like this: ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ---------------------------------
acute is the angle that is smaller then 90 degrees obtuce is the anglee that is above 90 degrees
No, it cannot. There are several different reasons, but the most important one is because you copied the question wrong.
101.5 degrees is an obtuse angle. Obtuse angles are usually more than 90 degrees but less than 180 degrees.
An isosceles trapezoid would fit the given description which is different to a normal trapezoid.
has to have 2. a tryangle has angles adding up to 180. an obtuce angle is >90, so that leaves <90 for the other 2 angles so both are acute
A 102-degree angle would be acute, measuring less than 90 degrees but more than 0 degrees. It would appear as an angle that is slightly larger than a right angle (90 degrees) but smaller than a straight angle (180 degrees). Visually, it would look like an angle that is almost halfway between a right angle and a straight angle.