A regular trapezoid (!) is a square. And each interior angle of a square is 90 degrees.
This is not a trapezoid. For all trapezoids (in plane Geometry), the two sets of side angles must be supplementary, or add to 180. No two angles given are supplementary.
A right trapezoid.
Yes but it can have 2 right angles and one 120 degree angle plus one 60 degree angle
They are 135 deg each.
The sum of the angles in a trapezoid is 360 degrees, therefore, the forth angle in this problem is: 360 - (60+120+80) = 100 degrees
A regular trapezoid (!) is a square. And each interior angle of a square is 90 degrees.
This is not a trapezoid. For all trapezoids (in plane Geometry), the two sets of side angles must be supplementary, or add to 180. No two angles given are supplementary.
Yes, that would be a square.
A right trapezoid.
Not normally but it can have 2 right angles
Yes but it can have 2 right angles and one 120 degree angle plus one 60 degree angle
It fits the description of a trapezoid
They are 135 deg each.
A rhombus, trapezoid or parallelogram could all contain a 45 degree vertex. Squares and rectangles only have 90 degree vertices.
Each angle in a square is a right angle, or a 90 degree angle.
A rhombus, trapezoid or parallelogram could all contain a 45 degree vertex. Squares and rectangles only have 90 degree vertices.