rhombus
obtuse angles are larger than 180 degrees. acute are smaller than 180. for example ina trangle, the exterior angles are obtuse and the inner angles are acute.
It can be called obtuse, scalene ( if two acute angles are different ), or isosceles ( if two acute angles are the same ).
Not necessarily. The definition for a rhombus is a polygon with four sides of equal length. Therefore, a square is a rhombus. However, any rhombus not as square does have two same sized acute and obtuse angles.
No there are different angle such as right angles, obtuse angles, and acute angles.
The figure you are describing is a rhombus. A rhombus has two sets of parallel sides, all sides of equal length, and features two acute angles and two obtuse angles. The properties of angles in a rhombus ensure that opposite angles are equal, with the sum of adjacent angles being 180 degrees.
A rhombus.
obtuse angles are larger than 180 degrees. acute are smaller than 180. for example ina trangle, the exterior angles are obtuse and the inner angles are acute.
It can be called obtuse, scalene ( if two acute angles are different ), or isosceles ( if two acute angles are the same ).
Not necessarily. The definition for a rhombus is a polygon with four sides of equal length. Therefore, a square is a rhombus. However, any rhombus not as square does have two same sized acute and obtuse angles.
Squares have only four right angles. Also, all of their sides are the same length. So if a square had an obtuse or an acute angle, it really wouldn't be a square at all. - Girl_Pad01998
No there are different angle such as right angles, obtuse angles, and acute angles.
The figure you are describing is a rhombus. A rhombus has two sets of parallel sides, all sides of equal length, and features two acute angles and two obtuse angles. The properties of angles in a rhombus ensure that opposite angles are equal, with the sum of adjacent angles being 180 degrees.
rhombus
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.
The word 'Triangle' is a collective noun for different shaped triangles. They are ;- Equilateral(Acute) ; all sides are the same length , and all angles are 60 degrees. Isosceles (Can be Obtuse) ; two sides are the same length and two angles are equal. Right-angles (only Acute) ; one of the angles is a right angle(90 degrees) Scalene ; All sides are different length and all angles are different values. May be either acute of obtuse. For ALL triangles, on a plane surface, the sum of the interior angles is ALWAYS 180 degrees. NB For triangles drawn on a 3-dimensional surface, ( a sphere ; the Earth) the angles may add to 360 degrees.
A quadrilateral with two acute angles and all sides the same length is a rhombus. In a rhombus, opposite angles are equal, so if there are two acute angles, the other two angles must be obtuse, making a total of four angles. This property, along with having equal side lengths, characterizes the rhombus.
There are fewer obtuse angles than the other two kinds. There are the same number of acute and right angles and so the sum of the measures of the acute angles will be less than 5 right angles. The sum of two obtuse angles will be less than 5 right angles but may be less than, equal to, or more than 5 acute angles.