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.
True, if two angles form a linear pair, they are supplementary and add up to 180 degrees, which means they form a straight angle. Conversely, if two angles form a straight angle, they also form a linear pair, as they share a common side and their non-adjacent sides are opposite rays. Thus, both statements are true.
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.
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.
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.
The statement is incorrect; the measures of an exterior angle and its adjacent interior angle actually add up to 180 degrees, not 360. This is because they form a linear pair, meaning they are supplementary angles that lie on a straight line. The exterior angle is formed by extending one side of the polygon, while the adjacent interior angle is the one next to it. Thus, their sum is always 180 degrees.
Two angles that form a linear pair with angle 4 are angles that are adjacent to angle 4 and whose measures add up to 180 degrees. If angle 4 is one of the angles in a straight line, then the angles that are supplementary to it, such as angle A and angle B, would be the two angles forming a linear pair with angle 4.
To draw a pair of adjacent supplementary angles, start by drawing a straight line, which will serve as one side of both angles. Choose one angle measure, and use a protractor to measure that angle from the line, marking its vertex. Then, since supplementary angles add up to 180 degrees, subtract the given angle measure from 180 to find the measure of the second angle. From the vertex, use the protractor to measure and mark the second angle adjacent to the first, ensuring they share a common side along the straight line.
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.