Lines are perpendicular when they form a 90-degree angle so if the angles of two lines don't add up to 90, they are not perpendicular.
Two perpendicular lines make up a right angle
An angle bisector bisects an angle. A perpendicular bisector bisects a side.
Yes. If the two acute angles have their measures add up to 90 degrees, and both angles share one side that is common to each angle (they are adjacent), then their non-common sides will be perpendicular.
I can be. Perpendicular is a "T", with the stem SOMETIMES moved to the left or right. So, yes, a right angle CAN be perpendicular.
A vertical angle is perpendicular to a horizontal base and equals 90 degrees
Lines are perpendicular when they form a 90-degree angle so if the angles of two lines don't add up to 90, they are not perpendicular.
The angle between two perpendicular lines is 90 degrees. I am not sure whether you are referring to any other angles, and if yes, which ones.
Two perpendicular lines make up a right angle
No but a right angle is a perpendicular
no perpendicular is when two lines intersect at a 90 degree angle like a lowercase T.
An angle bisector bisects an angle. A perpendicular bisector bisects a side.
Draw a perpendicular from the point where the incident ray is reflected and the angle between the perpendicular and reflected ray is the angle of reflection.
Yes. If the two acute angles have their measures add up to 90 degrees, and both angles share one side that is common to each angle (they are adjacent), then their non-common sides will be perpendicular.
I can be. Perpendicular is a "T", with the stem SOMETIMES moved to the left or right. So, yes, a right angle CAN be perpendicular.
Yes it can.
Angle