It is 37.
Supplementary angles are pairs of angles whose sum equals 180 degrees. Therefore: 37 degrees + x degrees = 180 degrees. 180 degrees - 37 degrees = x degrees = 143 degrees. The supplement of a 37 degree angle is a 143 degree angle.
In a parallelogram, opposite angles are equal in measure. Therefore, the angle opposite the 37-degree angle will also measure 37 degrees. The sum of the interior angles of any quadrilateral is always 360 degrees. Since opposite angles in a parallelogram are equal, the other two angles will also measure 37 degrees each.
180 - 143 = 37 degrees
It is: 180-143 = 37 degrees
Yes, because a quadrilateral is a four sided polygon right, so all you do is put four lines together, as long as they are connected, so yes.
In geometry the given information in the question is known as an 'ambiguous case' that has two possible solutions when using the rules of trigonometry which are that the other two angles are 35 degrees and 115.55 degrees with a 3rd side of 143.14cm or that the other two angles are 145 degrees and 5.55 degrees with a 3rd side of 15.35cm.
Complement . . . another angle, of 53 degrees Supplement . . . another angle, of 143 degrees
An angle of 143 degrees would be considered an "obtuse" angle. This is because its degrees measurements exceed 90 but do not go above a straight line of 180 degrees.
143
A gas at -245 degrees is colder than a gas at -143 degrees. Temperature is directly related to the average kinetic energy of particles in a substance, and the lower the temperature, the slower the particles are moving, making it colder.
It's the direction that's 143 degrees to the right of North, or 53 degrees to the right of East, or 37 degrees to the left of South. Those are all the same direction.