Supplementary Angles
"The sum of the angles in a triangle equal 180 degrees" is a true statement.
In Geometry that are many different types of polygons. The polygon whose angles equal up to 180 degrees is a triangle.
180 degrees
No because they equal 180 degrees
The interior angles of a rhombus equal 180 degrees because a rhombus is a type of quadrilateral, and the sum of the interior angles of any quadrilateral is always 360 degrees. In a rhombus, opposite angles are equal, and adjacent angles are supplementary, meaning they add up to 180 degrees. Therefore, if you take any two adjacent angles in a rhombus, their sum will always equal 180 degrees.
"The sum of the angles in a triangle equal 180 degrees" is a true statement.
180 degrees
In Geometry that are many different types of polygons. The polygon whose angles equal up to 180 degrees is a triangle.
No because they equal 180 degrees
The angles that are equal to 180 are called supplementary angles. The angles that equal 90 degrees are called complimentary.
The 3 interior angles of any triangle add up to 180 degrees
Supplementary angles are two angles that add up to 180 degrees. They are only equal if they both equal 90 degrees.
No. Only the sum of the measures of the angles of a triangle equal to 180 degrees; in the case of a quadrilateral it amounts to 360 degrees.
They are supplementary angles
Yes, adding up the inner angles of a triangle gives 180 degrees.
180 degrees
supplementary