Yes.
2 right angles will form a supplementary angle of 180 degrees
By a straight angle I assume you mean an 180° angle, so two angles that form a 180° angle would be called supplementary angles.
A straight angle is an angle.
Yes.
queen Eli
Let's call the two angles angle 1 and angle 2. We are given that angle 1 and angle 4 form a linear angle and that angle 2 and angle 4 form a linear angle. Because linear angles measure 180 degrees, we arrive at: m<1 + m<4 = 180 m<2 + m<4 = 180. By subtracting the second equation from the first, we get: m<1 - m<2 = 0. And finally: m<1 = m<2. Thus, angle 1 is congruent to angle 2.
angles 1 and angles 2 are vertical angles this is so wrong the correct answer angle 1 and angle 2 are adjacent angles.
2 supplementary adjacent angles for a straight angle.
All triangles have 3 interior angles that add up to 180 degrees and they are:- Right angle triangle: 90 degree angle and 2 acute angles Obtuse triangle: An obtuse angle and 2 acute angles Scalene triangle: 3 acute angles of different sizes Isosceles triangle: 2 equal angles and another angle Equilateral triangle: 3 equal angles that each measures 60 degrees
A 90 degree angle and 2 acute angles will form a right angle triangle.
Of course not !Stick a 2° angle onto a 4° angle and you still have only a 6° angle.
Two pairs of adjacent angles are formed when two lines intersect. For example, if two lines cross each other, they create four angles, and each angle shares a common side with another angle. For instance, if angle A and angle B share a side and have a common vertex, they are adjacent angles. Similarly, angle C and angle D can be another pair of adjacent angles if they share a side and vertex with each other.