A rhombus, trapezoid or parallelogram could all contain a 45 degree vertex. Squares and rectangles only have 90 degree vertices.
Most quadrilaterals. The only exceptions are rectangles (including squares).
trapezoid, parallelogram, and rhombus (people call it the diamond)
90 - 45 = 45 So another 45 degree angle is the complement of a 45 degree angle.
the coterminal side of 45 degree is -315 degree
A rhombus, trapezoid or parallelogram could all contain a 45 degree vertex. Squares and rectangles only have 90 degree vertices.
A quadrilateral that could have a 45-degree vertex angle is a kite. In a kite, the two pairs of adjacent sides are congruent, and one pair of opposite angles is congruent. Therefore, if one of the angles is 45 degrees, the opposite angle would also be 45 degrees. This makes a kite one of the quadrilaterals that could have a 45-degree vertex angle.
A rhombus, trapezoid or parallelogram could all contain a 45 degree vertex. Squares and rectangles only have 90 degree vertices.
Most quadrilaterals. The only exceptions are rectangles (including squares).
A square has diagonals that split the angles into two 45-degree parts, thus bisecting them.
trapezoid, parallelogram, and rhombus (people call it the diamond)
A 45 degree turn is an angle
45 degree angle
No, elbow 135 degree and elbow 45 degree are different from each other.
Yes, there is a 45 degree angle, and it is known as an acute angle.
90 - 45 = 45 So another 45 degree angle is the complement of a 45 degree angle.
45 degree - if the question concerns an angle. If it is temperature, the answer depends on the scale.