Not necessarily. The rays may not intersect.
No. If the rays do not meet, there is no angle.
It's true, an angle is made up of two rays. Two rays meet at a point, and their relative position at the point where they meet will define an angle.
Two intersecting rays form an angle. Without two rays you do not have an angle.
An Angle
Yes. Any two rays which have the same end point.
Two rays with the same origin make an angle.
Angle
No. If the rays do not meet, there is no angle.
It's true, an angle is made up of two rays. Two rays meet at a point, and their relative position at the point where they meet will define an angle.
An angle.
angle
yes
An angle.
No. If the rays do not meet, there is no angle.
A figure that is made up of two noncollinear rays with a common endpoint is an angle. The angle that is formed can be acute, right, obtuse or reflex.
Two intersecting rays form an angle. Without two rays you do not have an angle.
No, it is not correct. In 2-dimensional (plane) and 3-dimensional (solid) geometry, parallel lines do not make an angle. In 3-d space skew lines also do not make an angle in the conventional sense.