A shape that has both acute and obtuse angles is a scalene triangle. In a scalene triangle, all sides and angles are different, which allows for the presence of both acute angles (less than 90 degrees) and at least one obtuse angle (greater than 90 degrees). Other polygons, such as certain irregular quadrilaterals, can also exhibit this combination of angle types.
Yes, a trapezoid (specifically an isosceles trapezoid) can have two acute angles and two obtuse angles. In such a trapezoid, the angles adjacent to the longer base are acute, while the angles adjacent to the shorter base are obtuse. This configuration allows for a shape that features both types of angles.
It can have a mixture of both acute and obtuse angles providing that the 4 interior angles add up to 360 degrees.
If two of the angles of a parallelogram are acute, then the other two angles will be obtuse. Since a parallelogram contains two pairs of parallel sides, both of the acute angles and both of the obtuse angles respectively will measure the same.
They are both angles.....acute is smaller than ninety degrees and obtuse is larger/wider. They aren't alike in a lot of ways though.
Acute angles and obtuse angles are both types of angles measured in degrees. An acute angle measures less than 90 degrees, while an obtuse angle measures more than 90 degrees but less than 180 degrees. They are alike in that both are formed by two rays that meet at a common endpoint, but they differ in their degree measurement and the visual representation, with acute angles appearing sharper and obtuse angles appearing wider.
Yes, a trapezoid (specifically an isosceles trapezoid) can have two acute angles and two obtuse angles. In such a trapezoid, the angles adjacent to the longer base are acute, while the angles adjacent to the shorter base are obtuse. This configuration allows for a shape that features both types of angles.
A shape with 2 acute angles and 2 obtuse angles is typically a quadrilateral. This configuration can create various forms, such as a kite or an irregular quadrilateral, as long as the sum of the angles equals 360 degrees. The presence of both acute and obtuse angles gives the shape a unique appearance, distinguishing it from more regular polygons.
It can have a mixture of both acute and obtuse angles providing that the 4 interior angles add up to 360 degrees.
If two of the angles of a parallelogram are acute, then the other two angles will be obtuse. Since a parallelogram contains two pairs of parallel sides, both of the acute angles and both of the obtuse angles respectively will measure the same.
both
They are both angles.....acute is smaller than ninety degrees and obtuse is larger/wider. They aren't alike in a lot of ways though.
Yes and no. The obvious is that they are both angles, but they are different from how many degrees they are.
Acute angles and obtuse angles are both types of angles measured in degrees. An acute angle measures less than 90 degrees, while an obtuse angle measures more than 90 degrees but less than 180 degrees. They are alike in that both are formed by two rays that meet at a common endpoint, but they differ in their degree measurement and the visual representation, with acute angles appearing sharper and obtuse angles appearing wider.
If they both add up to 180 degrees then they are supplementary angles.
A scalene triangle can have 1 obtuse angle and 2 different acute angles or it can have 3 different acute angles providing that the 3 angles in both scalene triangles add up to 180 degrees.
The sum of two acute angles is sometimes an obtuse angle because, acute angles can measure from 10 to 90 degrees. Two 30 degree angles would both be acute whose sum would only create another acute angle of 60 degrees. But, two80 degree angles would both be acute angle whose sum would only create an obtuse angle.
Triangles:)