sometime true
In a Linear Pair the 2 angles add up to 180 degrees while Vertical Angles are just 2 vertical angles that are congruent.
A good theme would be space, such as angles on stars. Another one would be a sport, like tennis. For angles you could use the angles of arms with people playing.
In a linear graph the slope is the same everywhere, assuming vertical line graphs are not allowed. Depending on context, a vertical line (say x = 3) is not always allowed. If the graph is a vertical line then the slope is infinite at the single value of x. (That would be 3 in the example above.) The slope would then be undefined elsewhere.
yes yes No, vertical lines are not functions
linear pair ^^
In a Linear Pair the 2 angles add up to 180 degrees while Vertical Angles are just 2 vertical angles that are congruent.
No, in fact, vertical angles can't be a linear pair. Vertical angles are opposite from each other which also make them equal each other. A linear pair has two angles adjacent to each other that eqaul 180 degrees.
Always :P
no it's impossible
you bet it can
Yes, they can.
no
No, angles that form a linear pair are supplementary.
Supplementary angles are angles whose sum always equals 180 degrees.
vertical angles theorem
Yes.
The answer is yes, because supplementary angles are to angles that add up to 180.