70 and 80 degrees
In a triangle, each exterior angle is equal to the sum of the two opposite interior angles.
The exterior angle of a triangle is equal to the sum of the two opposite interior angles. So if a triangle had points A, B and C: The exterior angle at B would equal the sum of interior angles at A and C. Similarly, the exterior angle at C would equal the sum of interior angles at A and B And the the exterior angle at A would equal the sum of interior angles at C and B.
No. It is equal to the sum of the opposite interior angles.
Any exterior angle of a triangle always equals the sum of the two interior opposite angles.
two opposite interior angles.
The opposite of exterior is interior meaning inside
interior
The opposite is exterior (outside).
The opposite is exterior (outside).
Interior
In a triangle, each exterior angle is equal to the sum of the two opposite interior angles.
The opposite of Exterior is Interior... :) Is that what you were looking for? Hope I helped xXx
That is only true of triangles and is a consequence of the parallel postulate. In fact it is an alternative way of stating Euclid's parallel postulate.
The exterior angle of a triangle is equal to the sum of the two opposite interior angles. So if a triangle had points A, B and C: The exterior angle at B would equal the sum of interior angles at A and C. Similarly, the exterior angle at C would equal the sum of interior angles at A and B And the the exterior angle at A would equal the sum of interior angles at C and B.
No. It is equal to the sum of the opposite interior angles.
they are the opposite of same side interior angles
Both alternate interior and alternate exterior angle pairs lie on opposite sides of the transversal.