Yes. Their sum is always 180 degrees.
They both will be right angles that add up to supplementary angles 180 degrees
Two right angles are supplementary.
Supplementary
If one angle is right, then all angles are right. The diagonals of a parallelogram bisect each other. Opposite angles are congruent. Opposite sides are congruent. Consecutive angles are supplementary.
Yes. This is true because opposite angles are congruent and adjacent angles are supplementary.
Two right angles would always be supplementary because the sum of their angles is 180 degrees.
Vertical angles are always, by definition, congruent. Note: If the two vertical angles are right angles then they are both congruent and supplementary.
Yes, but not always because 2 right angles would also be supplementary adding to 180 degrees.
No, right angles are 90 degrees, supplementary and vertical angles are 180 degrees.
Angles that are congruent and supplementary must be right angles.
Yes, intersecting chords in a circle create a pair of vertical angles, which are always congruent. However, these angles are not supplementary; supplementary angles are those that sum to 180 degrees. Vertical angles formed by intersecting chords are equal to each other, meaning they are not supplementary unless they each measure 90 degrees, which would make them right angles.
They both will be right angles that add up to supplementary angles 180 degrees
Two right angles are supplementary.
Supplementary.
two supplementary angles * * * * * NO! Supplementary angles sum to 180 degrees = 2 right angles. The correct answer is complementary angles.
Yes because they add up to 180 degees
In a right angled triangle, the two non-right angles are complementary, because in a triangle the three angles add to 180°, and 90° has already been taken by the right angle. When two angles add to 90°, we say they "Complement" each other.