No because the 4 interior angles of any 4 sided quadrilateral always add up to 360 degrees.
A quadrilateral is a shape with four sides... It doesn't have *one* angle. The sum of the interior angles of a quadrilateral will always be 360 degrees, however, it is impossible to know the value an individual angle of a quadrilateral with the information given.
Any angle <360 degrees is possible, though it would be a concave quadrilateral if the angle were greater than 180 deg.
No because the 4 interior angles of a quadrilateral add up to 360 degrees
Possibly in the form of an arrowhead providing that its 4 interior angles add up to 360 degrees
The angles of a quadrilateral add to 360 degrees.
Quadrilaterals have a constant total angle measurement of 360 degrees
A quadrilateral is a shape with four sides... It doesn't have *one* angle. The sum of the interior angles of a quadrilateral will always be 360 degrees, however, it is impossible to know the value an individual angle of a quadrilateral with the information given.
For any quadrilateral (i.e. 4-sided figure), the angles will add up to 360 degrees. Since an obtuse angle is any angle with a measurement over 90 degrees, it is possible to have a quadrilateral with 3 obtuse angles. The fourth angle, however, must be acute (i.e. smaller than 90 degrees). Having 3 obtuse angles is not a requirement, however, for a quadrilateral.
20 degrees
Any angle <360 degrees is possible, though it would be a concave quadrilateral if the angle were greater than 180 deg.
Sum of angles in a quadrilateral is 360° Three angles sum to 80° + 120° + 65° = 265° Therefore the missing fourth angle is 360° - 265° = 95°
is an exterior angle of a quadrilateral always sometime or never 90 degrees
360 - (80 + 120 + 65) ie 95o
The following are angles in a convex quadrilateral: Angle A = 80 degrees Angle B = 98 degree Angle C = 70 degrees What is the measure of the missing angle?
Not possible... The internal angles of a quadrilateral always total 360. If you MUST have an angle of 90 degrees - the remaining angles must total 270. At least one of the remaining angles will always be obtuse.
No because the 4 interior angles of a quadrilateral add up to 360 degrees
67.5 degrees