No such thing as opposite of acute angle.
An ACUTE angle is an angle of less than 90 degrees.
A RIGHT angle is an angle of 90 degrees only.
An OBTUSE angle is an angle between 90 degrees and 180 dehrees.
An angle of 180 degrees is a straight line.
A REFLEX angle is an angle between 180 degrees and 360 degrees.
The hypotenuse is NEVER opposite an acute angle. It's always the side of the right triangle that's opposite the right angle.
A parallelogram has 2 equal opposite acute angles and 2 equal opposite obtuse angles with its 4 angles adding up to 360 degrees
1 acute angle = 1 acute angle
Certainly. In fact, if the legs of the right triangle are not equal, then that descriptionmust be true for one of its acute angles.
An acute angle is an angle less than 90°. So an angle of 17° is an acute angle.
The hypotenuse is NEVER opposite an acute angle. It's always the side of the right triangle that's opposite the right angle.
In a triangle the smallest angle is always opposite the shortest side. It will always be an acute angle.
It could be a right angle or a reflex angle
A parallelogram has 2 equal opposite acute angles and 2 equal opposite obtuse angles with its 4 angles adding up to 360 degrees
1 acute angle = 1 acute angle
sin θ : 1 = the length of opposite side to angle θ : the length of the hypotenuse
That is an acute angle. An obtuse angle is not acute.
Certainly. In fact, if the legs of the right triangle are not equal, then that descriptionmust be true for one of its acute angles.
It has 2 opposite acute angles and 2 opposite obtuse angles which add up to 360 degrees.
An acute angle
acute angle
An acute angle is an angle less than 90°. So an angle of 17° is an acute angle.