Consecutive angles in a parallelogram will not be complementary. Complementary would mean the angles would add up to 90 degrees. Consecutive angles add up to 180 degrees, meaning they are supplementary.
No.
The question does not really make sense. Once might ask, "Are consecutive angles in a parallelogram complementary?" in which case the answer is no. Complementary angles are angles which add up to 90 degrees. Consecutive angles are angles next to each other (or follow each other). In a parallelogram, consecutive angles are supplementary (add to 180 degrees). In a parallelogram, opposite angles are equal. You could have a parallelogram where two angles are 45 degree (and thus complementary) and then the other two angles would be 135 degrees.
yes...always
No, but the opposite angles are congruent because it has 2 equal opposite acute angle and 2 equal opposite obtuse angles that all add up to 360 degrees.
No.
No.
Consecutive angles in a parallelogram will not be complementary. Complementary would mean the angles would add up to 90 degrees. Consecutive angles add up to 180 degrees, meaning they are supplementary.
No.
The question does not really make sense. Once might ask, "Are consecutive angles in a parallelogram complementary?" in which case the answer is no. Complementary angles are angles which add up to 90 degrees. Consecutive angles are angles next to each other (or follow each other). In a parallelogram, consecutive angles are supplementary (add to 180 degrees). In a parallelogram, opposite angles are equal. You could have a parallelogram where two angles are 45 degree (and thus complementary) and then the other two angles would be 135 degrees.
yes...always
False.
No - they are supplementary - which means they add up to 180.
Yes, that's true for any parallelogram.
Not enough information. Consecutive angles add up to 90 degrees. Opposite angles are congruent and vary depending on how flat the rhombus is.
- A rhombus had four sides and four angles - All four sides of a rhombus are congruent - Both pairs of opposite angles of a rhombus are congruent - One angle of a rhombus is supplementary to both of its consecutive angles - The diagonals of a rhombus bisect each other and are perpendicular - Both pairs of opposite sides of a rhombus are parallel
If consecutive angles of a 4-sided figure were complementary, then all four of themwould add up to 180°. But that's a problem, because we all know that the sum of allfour angles in any 4-sided figure is always 360°. So the answer must be: 'No'.