???
The definition of supplementary angles is: Two angles whose sum is 180 degrees.If one of them is 180 degrees, then the other one is zero degrees.
Supplementary angles add up to 180, so if one of them is 88, the other is 180 - 88 = 92.
the answer is 22,97
23 degrees and 67 degrees
The second angle must be 2 x (90 - 77) ie 26o, so the other is 64o
Two supplementary angles are two angles whose measures add up to 180 degrees. For example, if one angle measures 70 degrees, the other angle must measure 110 degrees to be supplementary. Supplementary angles can be adjacent, forming a straight line, or they can be separate.
Supplementary angles add up to 180 degrees. If one angle = 130 degrees the other must be 180 - 130 = 50 degrees
The definition of supplementary angles is: Two angles whose sum is 180 degrees.If one of them is 180 degrees, then the other one is zero degrees.
the other is 4 degrees. supplementary angles add to 180 degrees
180 - 35 = 145. Half of 145 is 72.5 which is the smaller angle. (The other angle is 35 + 72.5 ie 107.5)
Supplementary angles are two angles that add up to 180 degrees. In other words, if you have one angle measuring x degrees, its supplementary angle will measure 180 - x degrees.
Supplementary angles add up to 180, so if one of them is 88, the other is 180 - 88 = 92.
Supplementary angles are two angles whose measures add to 180 degrees. Adjacent angles are two angles that happen to lie next to each other, so that they combine to form a larger angle whose measure is the sum of the measures of the adjacent angles. Angles may be both adjacent and supplementary, in which case they will form a straight angle.
The easiest way (for me) to solve this type of question is to put it into an equation in terms of x.Since one angle is 1/4 the size of the other, the two angles would be x and 1/4x, or 4x and x (I suggest using 4x and x).Since the angles are supplementary, their sum is 180 degrees.4x+x=1805x=180x=36 degrees
one angle will be 69 degrees while the other angle will be 111 degrees.
No. The interior angle and exterior angle at the same vertex are supplementary. Each of them is (180 degrees minus the other). In rectangles (including squares), the interior and exterior angles at each vertex are both right angles.
The Congruent Supplement Theorem states that if two angles are supplementary to the same angle (or to congruent angles), then those two angles are congruent to each other. In other words, if angle A and angle B are both supplementary to angle C, then angle A is congruent to angle B. This theorem is useful in proving relationships between angles in geometric proofs.