The question, as it stands makes no sense at all. Perhaps it is meant to be what has one or more right angles. But even that makes little practical sense. Any polygon can have one or more right angles, so how does the answer help?
The question, as it stands makes no sense at all. Perhaps it is meant to be what has one or more right angles. But even that makes little practical sense. Any polygon can have one or more right angles, so how does the answer help?
The question, as it stands makes no sense at all. Perhaps it is meant to be what has one or more right angles. But even that makes little practical sense. Any polygon can have one or more right angles, so how does the answer help?
The question, as it stands makes no sense at all. Perhaps it is meant to be what has one or more right angles. But even that makes little practical sense. Any polygon can have one or more right angles, so how does the answer help?
A rectangle has 4 right angles.
It can have a right angle, or more than one right angle, but it also is possible that it does not have any right angles.
no it has 0
If only right angles, then the answer is squares and rectangles. If one or more right angles, the answer will include trapezium, kite and any (irregular) polygon with 5 or more sides. A single triangle can have only one right angle, but several triangles can have right angles, (sorry, that's purely a linguistic argument).
a triangle can have only one right angle because the sum of all the three angles of a triangle has to be 180. so if there are more than one right angles, the sum of the angles will exceed 180 and hence the plane figure will no longer be a triangle
Restate the question: What figure always has two right angles?If this is not your question, please clarify and resubmit it.- A square or a rectangle always have four right angles.- A trapezoid can have two adjacent right angles with the one of the other angles acute and the fourth angle obtuse.- A quadrilateral can have two opposite right angles with the other two acute and obtuse.- A pentagon can have two or three right angles, and the same can be said of polygons with more sides.)There is no named geometric figure (polygon) which always has exactly two right angles.
A square must have 4 parallel sides of equal length and 4 right angles, a rhombus does not need to have any right angles (but can include one or more right angles).
You can have two right angles and still be only a trapezoid. With three right angles then it would be a rectangle.
I would have to say no. A triangle can't have more than one right angle to begin with. If it had 2 right angles, then it is no longer a triangle. The angles of the triangle have to add up to 180 degrees and a right angle is 90 degrees. So if you had two right angles you would already be at 180 degrees.
No, triangles cannot have more than one right angle. By definition, a right angle measures 90 degrees, and the sum of the interior angles of a triangle is always 180 degrees. Therefore, if one angle in a triangle is a right angle, the other two angles must add up to 90 degrees, making it impossible for the triangle to have more than one right angle.
When its angles are right angles
Triangles do not necessarily have right angles, but they can. A triangle with a right angle is called a right triangle. A triangle cannot have more than one right angle, since the total of all three angles of every triangle equals 180°.