Lots of possibilities, but a simple one is to imagine a child's drawing of a house. This will usually consist of a square (or rectangular) "house" part with a triangular roof on top. If the roof is steep enough, it will have an acute angle at the top. The two base angles (sides of the house) will be 90 deg and the two angles where the walls meet the roof will be obtuse.
If you take a pie, and cut it into quarters, an acute angle is any angle smaller than one quarter of the pie.
It is an acute angle that is greater than 0 but less than 90 degrees
Such a triangle would presumably have one right angle, and two acute angles. A right angle has a measure of 90 degrees; an acute angle has a measure of less than 90 degrees. Since both of the other two angles in a right triangle must be acute angles, you'd think at first that every right triangle must be a right acute triangle. But when you go and look up the definition of an "acute triangle", it turns out to be a triangle in which all three angles are acute. So the fact is that there's no such thing as a right acute triangle, because the 90-degree angle in a right triangle is not acute.
A pentagon is a five-sided figure.
it looks like an angle..... -.-
An acute angle.
An acute angle
It is an acute angle
An acute angle is smaller than a right or 90 degree angle
A pentagon. It could look like a child's outline of a house.
An acute angle.
acute
Is 65 an acute angle
a chicken i dont know
If you take a pie, and cut it into quarters, an acute angle is any angle smaller than one quarter of the pie.
It would look like a hut.
It is an an acute angle that is less than 90 degrees but greater than 0.