acute
There is no specific name, but "right-angled polygon" will suffice.
Any polygon can have just one right angle, from a right angled triangle upwards.
right-angle triangle has at least one right angle .
Any polygon with more than three sides may have an angle greater than 180 degrees.
it wouldn't be a rhombus if it had a right angle.
There is no specific name, but "right-angled polygon" will suffice.
Any polygon, if it is not regular, can have 1 right angle.
A right angle triangle
The answer to this would be any acute polygon, such as an equilateral triangle. The definition of acute polygons is that no angle in the polygon is greater than or equal to 90 degrees.
right angle triangle
Any polygon can have just one right angle, from a right angled triangle upwards.
Any polygon can have one right angle, for example, a right angled triangle.
A right triangle.
right-angle triangle has at least one right angle .
An irregular septagon: the right-angle will prevent it being regular.
The simple answer is no, not all parallelograms have at least one right angle. However, there are some that do. Rectangles and squares are 'special' parallelograms that all have at least one right angle.
A polygon is pretty much any enclosed shape constructed of straight line segments connected end to end. The angles do not have to be right. In fact, they usually aren't. A right angle would NEVER be a polygon, as it is just one right angle. In Euclidean geometry a right angle must be accompanied by two acute angles to form a triangle--the polygon with the smallest number of sides.