180 -90 = 90
It is also a right angle Supplement = 180 - angle = 180-90 = 90 = right angle
yes complement is 90-angle and supplement 180-angle
Complement of a given angle = (90 - given angle) Supplement of a given angle = (180 - given angle)
90 degrees
It is 90 degrees more than the original angle.
It is also a right angle Supplement = 180 - angle = 180-90 = 90 = right angle
A 90 degree angle
yes complement is 90-angle and supplement 180-angle
An acute angle is an angle that is between 0 and 90 degrees. The supplement of the angle is 180 degrees minus the magnitude of the angle. Since the original angle is greater than 0 degrees, the supplement must be less than 180-0 = 180 degrees. Since the original angle is less than 90 degrees, the supplement must be greater than 180-90 = 90 degrees. Thuis, the supplement measures between 90 and 180 degrees - that is, it is an obtuse angle.
To be both a complement and a supplement at the same time there can be no angle. However: The angle 45° is self-complementary since 45° + 45° = 90° The angle 90° is self-supplementary since 90° + 90° = 180°
90 since 90 + 90 = 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.
Complement of a given angle = (90 - given angle) Supplement of a given angle = (180 - given angle)
90 degrees
complement is 90 degrees minus angle supplement is 180 degrees minus angle 90-77 = 13 = complement 180-77 = 103 = supplement
Complement: 22 Supplement: 112
An obtuse angle is one over 90 degrees. If you are looking for the supplement it means that both angles have to equal 180 degrees. So the supplement of an obtuse angle would be an acute angle.