angles are complementary if they equal 90 degrees when added. if you have one angle that's 40 degrees, then the compliment of it is and angle of 50 degrees. the way you can find it is to subtract the angle whose compliment you want to find, and then subtract it from 90. No all wrong this is patrick
No. An angle is (90 minus its complement) degrees. The definition of the complement is "90 degrees minus the original angle".
A 45 degree angle is its own complement; 45 + 45 = 90.
An angle and its complement sum to ninety degrees. 90-52=38
An angle and its complement have to add to 90 degrees. 77 and 13 add to 90. 13 is the complement of 77. You will also be doing supplement. They add to 180.
The question asks for the complement of (the supplement of (80 degrees) ). We have to find the supplement of 80 first, and then find the complement of the supplement. The supplement of an angle is (180 - the angle). The complement of an angle is (90 - the angle). The supplement of 80 degrees is (180 - 80) = 100 degrees. The complement of that supplement is (90 - 100) = -10 degrees.
The complement is 60 degrees.
Since the sum of the two complement angles is 90⁰ , then the complement of a 60⁰ angle is a 30⁰ angle.
The complement of an acute angle A is the angle 90° - A. The complement of 13° is 77°.
Any angle less than 90o will have a complement.
No. An angle is (90 minus its complement) degrees. The definition of the complement is "90 degrees minus the original angle".
An angle and its complement add to 90 degrees. Hence an angle of 41 degrees has 49 degrees as its complement.
The angle is 50 and its compliment is 40.
The complement is how much you have left after you subtract the first angle from 90 degrees.
go off
The complement of an angle C is (90 - C) So the complement of an angle of 17.7° is (90 - 17.7) = 72.3°
Subtract the angle from 90 degrees and you have the complement Subtract the angle from 180 degrees and you have the supplement
yes complement is 90-angle and supplement 180-angle