Asked by Alto Saxophone
Can a triangle have two right angles, and why or why not?(1 point)
Responses
No, because a triangle must have an obtuse angle.
No, because a triangle must have an obtuse angle.
Yes, because 90 + 90 = 180
90
+
90
=
180
.
Yes, because 90 plus 90 equals 180 .
Yes, because it would be a right triangle.
Yes, because it would be a right triangle.
No, because there needs to be a third angle.
Responses
No, because a triangle must have an obtuse angle.
No, because a triangle must have an obtuse angle.
Yes, because 90 + 90 = 180
90
+
90
=
180
.
Yes, because 90 plus 90 equals 180 .
Yes, because it would be a right triangle.
Yes, because it would be a right triangle.
No, because there needs to be a third angle.
Answers
There are no human answers yet.
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
No, because there needs to be a third angle.
In a triangle, the sum of the three interior angles must equal 180 degrees. If two angles are each 90 degrees, their sum is 180 degrees, leaving no measurement for a third angle, which is not possible in a triangle.
In a triangle, the sum of the three interior angles must equal 180 degrees. If two angles are each 90 degrees, their sum is 180 degrees, leaving no measurement for a third angle, which is not possible in a triangle.
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