An angle that measures greater than 90 degrees but less than 180 degrees is an obtuse angle.
Any 'random' triangle is usually 'named' after the names of its angles - so that a triangle with angles A, B and C is generally referred to as "triangle ABC" - when this format is follwoed, then the sides will generally be named in lower-case letters which correspond to the angle they oppose - so that side 'a' is opposite angle A, and so on. The only other "names" for triangles are for the type of triangle in question, if all tghe sides are the same length then it is an "equilateral" triangle, if one of the sides is a right angle (measures 90 degrees) it is a "right" triangle (or a "right-angled" triangle). If one of the angles is greater than 90 degrees it is an "obtuse" triangle, and if all the angles are less than 90 degrees it is an "acute" triangle
Eight degrees below zero Celsius. It is a subtraction problem.
No because 0.31 is greater than 0.24
See related link. Upper and lower quartiles are the 75 and 25% percentile measures.
Accenture
An obtuse angle is greater than 90 but less than 180 degrees
No, an obtuse triangle cannot have a right triangle for the reason that an obtuse angle is greater than 90 degrees; therefore, the other two angles must be lower than 90 degrees.
An acute angle is lower than 90 degrees. An obtuse angle is higher than 90 degrees. But lower than 180 degrees. A right angle is exactly 90 degrees. A straight angle is exactly 180 degrees. A reflex angle is higher than 180 degrees. A Circle is exactly 360 degrees.
An acute angle is 89 degrees or lower.
90 degrees is a right angle lower than 90 is an acute angle higher than 90 but less than 180 is an obtuse angle 180 is a line Greater than 180 is a reflex angle
Over 90 but under 180 degrees. any lower is a right angle or acute angle, and higher is a straight line or a reflex angle.
When the angle of refraction is 90 degrees or greater, the refracted ray will actually travel along the boundary between the two materials. This phenomenon is known as total internal reflection, which occurs when light travels from a medium with a higher refractive index to one with a lower refractive index at a steep angle.
an acute angle doesn't have an exact measurement, but it is lower than 90 degrees. So any angle below 90 degrees is an acute.
greater than the angle of refraction
An obtuse angle is anything that measures between 91-179 degrees. (because 90 degrees is a right angle and 180 is a straight angle) An acute angle is anything that is lower than 90 degrees.** TIP: I remember acute angles because it has the word cute in it and I think "Oh it's so cute." I can remember right angles because "They are always right, proper, and tall." Straight angles look like a straight line so that's easy enough to remember.
The measure is lower than 90 degrees.
obtuse is180 degrees so it would be larger than a 90 degree or lower angle