They are adjacent angles.
No? Wouldn't they then be supplementary? Opposite rays make a straight angle/line, and if the exterior sides made the straight angle, the adjacent angles would be supplementary. ...Right?
-- Opposite sides are parallel. -- Opposite sides are equal. -- All four sides are equal. -- Adjacent sides are equal. -- Adjacent angles are supplementary. -- Opposite angles are equal. -- Diagonals are perpendicular. -- Interior angles sum to two straight angles. -- Exterior angles sum to two straight angles.
The opposite of straight could be crooked, curved, turned, or bent. The opposite of straight (honest) could be dishonest, devious, or corrupt. The opposite of straight (slang for heterosexual) would be gay.
The sum of an adjacent interior and its exterior angle will total to 360°. If the angles were to be equal, they would both have to be 180°. An angle of 180° is a straight line. A polygon may be composed of straight lines that intersect at vertices but a straight line has no vertex. That being the case, the answer to your question is "No".
Well, they're called vertically adjacent angles. They have the property that they are supplementary, because the non-adjacent sides form a straight line.
No? Wouldn't they then be supplementary? Opposite rays make a straight angle/line, and if the exterior sides made the straight angle, the adjacent angles would be supplementary. ...Right?
-- Opposite sides are parallel. -- Opposite sides are equal. -- All four sides are equal. -- Adjacent sides are equal. -- Adjacent angles are supplementary. -- Opposite angles are equal. -- Diagonals are perpendicular. -- Interior angles sum to two straight angles. -- Exterior angles sum to two straight angles.
Where two straight lines cross the "vertically opposite" angles are equal.
If the question refers to the total angle on a straight line then the angles are adjacent and supplementary - the angles total 180° .
It could be a right angle or a reflex angle
2 supplementary adjacent angles for a straight angle.
A pair of adjacent angles whose non-common sides are opposite rays are called a linear pair. The measure of a straight angle is 180 degrees, so a linear pair of angles must add up to 180 degrees.
the opposite of straight is crooked or wavy.
A pair of adjacent angles whose non-common sides are opposite rays are called a linear pair. The measure of a straight angle is 180 degrees, so a linear pair of angles must add up to 180 degrees.
Yes
The opposite of straight could be crooked, curved, turned, or bent. The opposite of straight (honest) could be dishonest, devious, or corrupt. The opposite of straight (slang for heterosexual) would be gay.
The sum of an adjacent interior and its exterior angle will total to 360°. If the angles were to be equal, they would both have to be 180°. An angle of 180° is a straight line. A polygon may be composed of straight lines that intersect at vertices but a straight line has no vertex. That being the case, the answer to your question is "No".