Yes
If the question refers to the total angle on a straight line then the angles are adjacent and supplementary - the angles total 180° .
2 supplementary adjacent angles for a straight angle.
A linear pair would be two angles that form a straight angle of 180 degrees.
Yes. Combined, they would form a straight line, or 180 degrees.
When any side of triangle is extended outwards then exterior angle is formed. Sum of this exterior angle and adjacent interior angle = 180o. If exterior angle = 180o(straight angle) then interior adjacent angle is 0o which is not possible. So exterior angle can't be straight angle.
A pair of adjacent angles whose non-common sides are opposite rays are called a linear pair. The measure of a straight angle is 180 degrees, so a linear pair of angles must add up to 180 degrees.
A pair of intersecting lines form adjacent and opposite angles. So the answer to the question is an opposite angle.
A pair of adjacent angles whose non-common sides are opposite rays are called a linear pair. The measure of a straight angle is 180 degrees, so a linear pair of angles must add up to 180 degrees.
A supplementary pair.
Any irregular polygon can have a pair of adjacent sides that do. Every pair of adjacent sides in every rectangle do.
A pair of intersecting lines form adjacent and opposite angles. So the answer to the question is an opposite angle.
A supplementary angle can be either adjacent or non-adjacent.A linear pair must be adjacent and is never non-adjacent.NOTE: They both add up to 180°.