No, because a complamentary angle just equals 90 degrees. An adjacent angle has a vertex and a common ray the same. If you have two angles that are not touching they cannot be adjacent because they dont have a same ray, but they may have a same vertex. If the two angles add up to 90 degrees they are complimentary and dont have to have anything the same.
Hope this helps! If it is confusing look up what an adjacent angle is, then look up what a complamentary angle is! :)
Complimentary angles
That would be a right angle: The measure of complementary angles adds up to 90 degrees. Adjacent angles are angles that share one common side and one common vertex, but no common interior points (the angles don't overlap). The non-common sides of two adjacent angles are the two "outside" sides (the unshared sides). Two adjacent and complementary angles would form a right angle split by a ray/line, and not necessarily bisected (perfectly divided in half).
No, complementary angles aren't normally congruent.
No. Complementary angles add up to 90 degrees. Supplementary angles add up to 180 degrees.
It depends on where or what CGD is.
adjacent angles can be complementary and supplementary you can see a video of khan
Are complementary angles alwys adjacent?
no
Yes....."All insulting angles are opposite"
Yes, complementary angles can sometimes be adjacent. Complementary angles are defined as two angles whose measures add up to 90 degrees. When these angles share a common vertex and a side, they are considered adjacent. However, complementary angles can also be non-adjacent, as long as their measures still total 90 degrees.
Not necessarily, complementary angles have degrees that add up to 90. This does not mean they are adjacent, although they can be.
no
No.
Yes
maybe
Yes
Complimentary angles