No. Any angles which add up to 180 degrees are supplementary.
Supplementary angles can have any number of angles as long as the angles add up to 180 degrees.
Up to 3 angles that add to 180 degrees.
you can use up to 2 angles in a supplementary angle. Just find 2 angles to fit into 180 degrees.
Only in some cases: 1. The angles are supplementary 2. The angles are at a single point on a straight line and all on the same side of it 3. The interior angles of a triangle. and a few more complicated scenarios. Otherwise, the answer is NO.
No, because the sum of the 3 angles of a triangle always equals 180 degrees. If two angles are supplementary by definition the two together already sum to 180 degrees, leaving no "space" for the third angle.
Opposite angle are equal and adjacent angles are supplementary. Thus the other 3 angles are 91o, 89o & 91o.
The 3 interior angles of any triangle add up to 180 degrees.
Without a visual or more information, I'm guessing that the picture is of angles 1 and 2 that are consecutive (share an angle side) and a separate picture of consecutive angles 3 and 4. With that said: 1) angle 2 congruent to angle 3................1) given 2) angle 1 is supplementary to angle 2....2) If angles are next to each other --> supps angle 3 is supplementary to angle 4 3) angle 1 congruent angle 4..............3) If supps to congruents angles ---> congruent
There are 4 types which are:- 1 Corresponding equal angles 2 Alternate equal angles 3 Vertical opposite equal angles 4 Interior supplementary or allied angles
call the small angle x, then given the ratios we have x+2x+3x=180 6x=180 so x=30 The angles are 30, 60, and 90.
120 (2/3 of 180)
All acute triangles have 3 interior angles and 3 exterior angles. This is true for all triangles.