An acute angle.
Acute is less than 90 degrees
Right is 90 degrees
Obtuse is greater than 90 degrees
Straight is 180 degrees
An obtuse angle is an angle that measures between 90 and 180 degrees. A 115-degree angle falls within this range, specifically closer to 90 degrees than 180 degrees. Visually, an obtuse 115-degree angle would appear wider than a right angle (90 degrees) but not as wide as a straight angle (180 degrees). It would resemble an open arm, wider than a right angle but not forming a straight line.
It is obtuse
Well, honey, if you're talking about an angle that measures 170 degrees, you're looking at an obtuse angle. It's bigger than a right angle but smaller than a straight angle. So, grab your protractor and get measuring!
No. There are 5 types of angles: Acute, Obtuse, Straight, Reflex, and Round (or perigon). Acute is any angle below 90 degrees. Obtuse is any angle above 90, but below 180. Straight is any angle that reaches 180 degrees exactly (a straight line). Reflex is any angle above 180 degrees, but below 360 degrees. Round (perigon) is an angle where, from the starting points comes arount to a full revolution. So, a 61 degree angle is below 90 degrees, therefore it is acute.
An obtuse angle.
It is 1 degree after a right angle. A right angle is 90 degrees so the smallest obtuse angle is 91 degrees.
The definition of an obtuse angle is that it is greater than 90 degrees and less than 180. By this definition, the smallest obtuse angle you can have is 90.00001 degrees, with infinite 0's.
106 degrees is an obtuse angle
It is an obtuse angle
No, just straight.
180 degrees is a straight line. This means 180 degrees is straight.
a striaght angle is always 180% but a obtuse angles is 91% OR higher
Yes an obtuse angle is 90 to 180 degrees when a straight angle is exactly 180 degrees.
An obtuse angle is an angle that is larger that 90 degrees but smaller than a straight angle (180 degrees).
straight
no... a straight line is a 180 degrees half circle.
It is an obtuse angle because it is greater than 90 but less than 180 degrees