77 degrees
No because the 3 interior angles of a triangle must add up to 180 degrees
For an isosceles triangle with vertex 46 degrees, the sum of the remaining two base angles is 180-46 = 134 degrees. Base angles are equal because it's isosceles, so each angle is half of their sum. 134/2 = 67 degrees. Thus, any isosceles trapezoid formed inside that isosceles triangle by drawing parallel lines to the triangle's base, will have base angle measures of 67 degrees, which are triangle's base angles.
The two angles are supplements, because the measures of supplementary angles add up to 180 degrees. 46 + 134 = 180.
This is a scalene triangle: The sum of the angles of any triangle must be 180 degrees. Subtracting the given angles from 180 leaves 98 degrees for the third angle. Therefore, no two angles of the triangle are equal, and no two sides can be equal.
Third angle would be 46 degree. 180-44-90 =46
A right triangle.
77 degrees
No because the 3 interior angles of a triangle must add up to 180 degrees
It is an acute scalene triangle
For an isosceles triangle with vertex 46 degrees, the sum of the remaining two base angles is 180-46 = 134 degrees. Base angles are equal because it's isosceles, so each angle is half of their sum. 134/2 = 67 degrees. Thus, any isosceles trapezoid formed inside that isosceles triangle by drawing parallel lines to the triangle's base, will have base angle measures of 67 degrees, which are triangle's base angles.
Yes. Triangles can be classified by the measures of their angles asacute, right, or obtuse. An acute angle has a measure that is lessthan 90°. A right-angle measures exactly 90°. An obtuse angle hasa measure that is greater than 90°.
No, because all three angles need to add to exactly 180 degrees
Because it's a right angle triangle use any of the trigonometrical ratios to find the two interior acute angles: tangent = opp/adj, sine = opp/hyp and cosine = adj/hyp The angles are to the nearest degree 46 and 44
It would be an acute-angled triangle, but it's missing a degree!
The two angles are supplements, because the measures of supplementary angles add up to 180 degrees. 46 + 134 = 180.
This is a scalene triangle: The sum of the angles of any triangle must be 180 degrees. Subtracting the given angles from 180 leaves 98 degrees for the third angle. Therefore, no two angles of the triangle are equal, and no two sides can be equal.