84*r*pi/180 units of length where the radius is r units of length.
Supplementary angles ad up to 180 degrees. If one angle is 96, how much more do you need to get to 180? 180 - 96= 84 degrees
I suppose your talking about a triangle. The angles of a triangle add up to 180 degrees. So A + B + C = 180 If A is three times the size of B and if A is C + 16 degrees Then (3B) + B +(3B - 16) = 180 So, let's remove the brackets..... 3B + B + 3B - 16 = 180 Add the Bs and move the 16 to the other side of the equation... 7B = 180 + 16 7B = 196 B = 196 / 7 B = 28 So now we know B we can work out the other angles... A = 3B = 3 x 28 = 84 C = A - 16 = 84 - 16 = 68 A = 84 B = 28 C = 68 ----- Sum 180
Answer: first angle =52 degree, second angle = 128 degree. Solution: x+y=180 (1) x+y/4=84 now multiply both sides of last equation by 4: 4x+y=336 (2) subtract (1) from (2), ie. find (2) - (1): 4x-x + y-y = 336-180 3x=156 dividing last result by 3: 3x/3=156/3 x=52 substitue in eq. (1): 52+y=180 y=180-52=128
84 is 140% of 60.
84
(14/84) x 360° = 60°
84+48=132 - 180 = 48 degrees The Answer is 48 Degrees.
84 degrees 180-48-48 = 84
Supplementary angle = 180 - 84 = 96 degrees.
84 degrees
84 degrees
Assuming you mean 84 degrees: 90 degrees - 84 degrees = 6 degrees. 6 degrees is your answer.
complement: 90 - A A=angle 1/5 x (A) + 6 = (90 - A) 1/5 x A = 84 - A 1/5 x A + A = 84 6/5 x A = 84 6 A = 420 A = 70 degrees
Its interior angles are 36, 60 and 84 degrees respectively with its greatest exterior angle being 144 degrees.
180 - 96 = 84 degrees.
Supplementary angles ad up to 180 degrees. If one angle is 96, how much more do you need to get to 180? 180 - 96= 84 degrees
It is an acute angle because it is greater than 0 but less than 90 degrees