true
An angle cannot "share" a vertex and a side.
That refers to the measure of the angle. In general, angles that are "wider" have a higher number of degrees. 360 degrees is a whole turn; 90 degrees is a quarter turn, so 87 degrees is a bit less than that.
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).
te answer is 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8
The complementary angles form a right angle with the shared ray.
It is a angle It is an angle
interceptive angle
An angle is a geometric figure formed by two rays that share a common endpoint.
Angle
The vertex.
Yes.
Two rays that share an endpoint form an angle.
true
True: ∟ V <
An angle
An angle is formed between the two rays at the common end point.
Angle