Yes, unless they are both right angles.
Yes because supplementary angles add up to 180 degrees.
Two acute angles cannot be supplementary but they can be complementary
acute and obtuse.
They make a pair of acute angles and a pair of obtuse angles. In rotational order, the angles are acute, obtuse, acute, obtuse.
there are 4 types of common angles. right, obtuse, acute, and straight.
If they both add up to 180 degrees then they are supplementary angles.
They both will be right angles that add up to supplementary angles 180 degrees
Sometimes. Actually, it is nearly always, but not quite.
One pair of equal acute angles and a pair of equal supplementary (obtuse) angles.
Yes because supplementary angles add up to 180 degrees.
A rhombus has two pairs of equal angles, the pairs being supplementary. Normally one pair is acute and the other is obtuse. In the special case, all four are right angles and the rhombus becomes a square.
They will be acute angles.
Two acute angles cannot be supplementary but they can be complementary
No, an obtuse triangles has one obtuse angle and two acute angles. If a triangle has an obtuse angle, it is considered obtuse and cannot be acute.
acute and obtuse.
They make a pair of acute angles and a pair of obtuse angles. In rotational order, the angles are acute, obtuse, acute, obtuse.
A rectangle has no acute angles and no obtuse angles. It has 4 right angles.