Don't see that it can.
A rectangle has 4 right angles whereas a regular 5 sided pentagon has no right angles.
No a pentagon has way more angles than a triangle does.
A polygon with six or more sides, in which four of the angles are right angles and the other angles are not. These others are of any type - as required. It cannot be a pentagon because, if 4 angles are right angles, the fifth would be 180 degrees!
Depends on the shape. A right triangle has one right angle, a rectangle has 4, an equilateral triangle has none, a circle has no angles. There are polygons with more than 4 right angles, and there is no limit on how many, but those with more than 4 are not convex.
If ONLY two right angles, then it could be a right angled trapezium or a kite If more than two it must be a rectangle (a square is an equilateral rectangle).
A rectangle has 4 right angles whereas a regular 5 sided pentagon has no right angles.
A regular pentagon has no right angles. An irregular pentagon could have no more than two right angles
Strictly speaking a pentagon is a plane figure with five straight sides and five angles, so yes, a pentagon can have one - or more - right angles. Imagine a rectangle with one of the corners cut off - that would have five sides and three right angles. .......... ............. ................ .................. .................. .................. ..................
No a pentagon has way more angles than a triangle does.
Any non-regular polygon from pentagon and up can have two or more right angles. Take a square and chop off the top and then make a two more connecting line segments (like a house with roof), and you have an irregular pentagon with 2 right angles at the bottom, for example.
To draw a pentagon with 3 right angles, start by drawing a horizontal line segment. From one endpoint of the line segment, draw a vertical line segment perpendicular to the horizontal line to form a right angle. Then, draw two more right angles by drawing two more line segments from the endpoints of the original horizontal line segment. Finally, connect the endpoints of the line segments to form a pentagon with 3 right angles.
Yes there are two different pentagons with two right angles next to each other and more with 2 right angles not next to each other.
A polygon with six or more sides, in which four of the angles are right angles and the other angles are not. These others are of any type - as required. It cannot be a pentagon because, if 4 angles are right angles, the fifth would be 180 degrees!
No, a pentagon cannot have 2 obtuse angles, 2 right angles, and 1 acute angle. The sum of interior angles in a pentagon is always 540 degrees. If a pentagon has 2 obtuse angles (each measuring more than 90 degrees) and 2 right angles (each measuring 90 degrees), the total would already exceed 540 degrees, leaving no room for an acute angle.
Depends on the shape. A right triangle has one right angle, a rectangle has 4, an equilateral triangle has none, a circle has no angles. There are polygons with more than 4 right angles, and there is no limit on how many, but those with more than 4 are not convex.
If ONLY two right angles, then it could be a right angled trapezium or a kite If more than two it must be a rectangle (a square is an equilateral rectangle).
An octagon has more sides and angles than a pentagon. An octagon is a polygon with eight sides and eight angles and a pentagon is a polygon with five sides and five angles.