All supplementary angles would be linear pairs IF they were adjacent. But they could be far apart.
Yes they do, love your question
not necesarily, supplementary angles have to add up to 180degrees so they can b linear pairs if their on the same line but not always
A parallelogram.
Supplementary angles are pairs of angles whose measures add up to 180 degrees.
No. An angle can have only one angle!
True only if the two angles are adjacent (i.e. have a point in common). By definition, supplementary angles add up to 180° therefore they are linear pairs, if they are adjacent. Otherwise false. Imagine drawing an angle of 40° at the top of the page and another of 140° at the bottom. These angles are supplementary but not a linear pair.
supplementary can sure be a linear pair. As long as their is 2 different angles and they equal 180 degrees.
Yes they do, love your question
not necesarily, supplementary angles have to add up to 180degrees so they can b linear pairs if their on the same line but not always
Supplementary angles
Actually, It is this. Question: Angle 1 and 4 are called ___ angles? Answer: Supplementary
whenever you have a supplementary angle, you know that both of the angles in the supplementary angles will add up to 180 degrees. if that's what you meant
Because "supplementary" means they sum to 180 degrees!
Yes, they are.
A+
Complementary angles sum to 90o Supplementary angles sum to 180o
A and B, B and C, C and D, D and A, are all supplementary pairs. The figure has no complementary pairs of angles.