A rhombus is a parallelogram with all its sides equal in length but none of its internal angles are right angles. If both pairs of opposite sides are of equal but different lengths then the quadrilateral is a simple parallelogram.
If the two pairs of adjacent sides are of equal but different lengths then the shape is called a kite.
If those are the angles of a quadrilateral then the 4th angle is 360-100-80-100 = 80 degrees
No because the 4 interior angles of a quadrilateral add up to 360 degrees
It could be a parallelogram because opposite angles are equal and its 4 interior angles add up to 360 degrees
Yes, angles between 90 and 180 degrees are called obtuseangles.On the other hand, there is no reason why an angle of exactly 100 degrees should have a special name. There is nothing special about this particular angle.
A trapazoid has those angles
Well, darling, that quadrilateral is a simple convex quadrilateral because all the interior angles add up to 360 degrees. It's also a quadrilateral with no parallel sides or right angles, so it's not a square, rectangle, parallelogram, or rhombus. Just a sassy little quadrilateral with angles of 110, 100, 80, and 70 degrees.
It is a parallelogram or a rhombus
50 degrees (360 degrees in a quadrilateral)
If those are the angles of a quadrilateral then the 4th angle is 360-100-80-100 = 80 degrees
No because the 4 interior angles of a quadrilateral add up to 360 degrees
125°
It could be a parallelogram because opposite angles are equal and its 4 interior angles add up to 360 degrees
Yes, angles between 90 and 180 degrees are called obtuseangles.On the other hand, there is no reason why an angle of exactly 100 degrees should have a special name. There is nothing special about this particular angle.
4
the special name for 100 is a century
A trapazoid has those angles
Yes. For example a quadrilateral can have angles 80°, 85°, 95°, 100 The only requirement is that the sum of the 4 angles is 360°.