yes
Assuming that you mean the inside angle is 108 the answer is a pentagon. Each angle inside the polygon forms an acute angle on the outside with the next side. The measurement of the exterior acute angle is: 180 - 108 = 72 . Since all the acute angle around the outside must add up to 360 we find: 360 / 72 = 5 There are five acute angles and therefore five sides to the polygon.
A right triangle.
A rhombus has 4 equal sides, 2 acute angles and 2 obtuse angles. If you are looking for a polygon with 4 equal sides and ALL acute angles, that can't exist. An acute angle is an angle of less than 90 degrees, so four of them add up to less than 360 degrees. But the four angles inside a four-sided polygon must add up to 360 degrees, so they can't all be acute.
1 acute angle = 1 acute angle
An angle is a measurement of degrees and as such it is not a polygon.
either an obtuse, acute, or right angle
a polygon and maybe a trapiziod
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.
A right angle triangle
a triangle
polygon
yes
Assuming that you mean the inside angle is 108 the answer is a pentagon. Each angle inside the polygon forms an acute angle on the outside with the next side. The measurement of the exterior acute angle is: 180 - 108 = 72 . Since all the acute angle around the outside must add up to 360 we find: 360 / 72 = 5 There are five acute angles and therefore five sides to the polygon.
Neither. A triangle is a polygon, not an angle - acute (acut, even) or obtuse.
lol i am so smart
No, an angle is not a polygon - lie a triangle - which is a closed plane shape bounded by straight lines.