Yes.
In parallelogram ABCD, angle A and angle D are adjacent or consecutive angles and are supplementary, meaning the sum of their measures is equal to 180 degrees. Angles A and C are opposite angles and have the same measure. These are some important properties of parallelograms. So to find the measure of angle C, you first have to find the measure of angle A. You can do that with a little algebra. First, set the expressions for the measures of angles A and D equal to 180 and solve for x. Then plug that value for x into the expression for the measure of angle A, which is the same as the measure for angle C. 5x + 30 + x = 180 6x + 30 = 180 6x = 150 x = 25 Therefore, 5x + 30 = 5(25) + 30 = 125 + 30 = 155 The measure of angle C is 155.
Consecutive means in a row or one after another.
Then it's consecutive angles are supplementary.
There are no "two consecutive integers" that can do that.But there are two consecutive even integers that can: 8 and 10 .
The consecutive angle to any particular angle is the one next to it.
a right angle, a obtuse angle, and an acute angle.
yes consecutive angle of square are equal bcoz every angle of a square is 90...so
consecutive angles
no it dose not
Two exterior angles are consecutive if they are formed at vertices which are next to one another.
consecutive\adjacent
No.
No.
either an obtuse, acute, or right angle
An internal angle of the polygon.
Only in squares and rectangles. In a rhombus, the consecutive angle is supplementary (sums to 180 degrees).