The hypotenuse is a side, not an angle. However, if you mean the angle across from the hypotenuse, it is always 90 degrees, or pi/2 radians because hypotenuses only exist in right triangles.
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.
You can use various properties of angles to find the measure of the second angle. For example, if you can see that the two angles form a right angle, then you know they add up to 90°, so you can subtract the known measure from 90° to find the measure of the other.
32.5 + 32.5 +115 =180
1st angle = 30 degrees 2nd angle = 60 degrees
The angle directly opposite the hypotenuse is always 90o in a right angle triangle and if you know the other sides you can work out the other angles using one of the three trigonometry equations. Sin, Tan or Cos then use the inverse and you will get the degree.
For a right angle triangle its hypotenuse is opposite its angle of 90 degrees and its other two angles are acute and its 3 angles add up to 180 degrees.
If it's a right angle triangle then the other 2 angles areacute
A triangle with an hypotenuse has a right angle that measures 90 degrees and two other acute angles,
No. Given a triangle with only the right angle and the hypotenuse, you cannot calculate the other sides nor the other angles.
One is the hypotenuse times the sine of one acute angle, the other, the hypotenuse times the sine of the other acute angle (or the cosine of the first).
One reason is that the longest side must be opposite the largest angle. Since the sum of the angles is 180 degrees, we know the other two angles together add up to 90. That is to say, we must have a right angle, 90 degrees, to have a hypotenuse, and the angle opposite the hypotenuse is the right angle.The other two angles are smaller so the sides that are opposite from them are smaller too.
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-- Like every triangle, a right triangle has three interior angles.-- Unlike any other triangle, one of the angles in a right triangle is a right angle.The other two are both acute angles.-- One acute angle is the angle whose cosine is length of one leg / length of hypotenuse-- Other acute angle is the angle whose sine is length of the same leg / length of the hypotenuse-- The length of the hypotenuse is the square root of [ (length of one leg)2 + length of other leg)2 ]
A hypotenuse (not hypotonuse), by itself will only tell you that the angle opposite it is a right angle. You need more information to find the other two angles.
A right angle, by definition, is 90 degrees. If you mean what are the other angles in a right triangle, you need one of the other angles in the triangle or the length of one side (not the hypotenuse) any two sides. You can then find the third side by Pythagoras, then the other two angles by simple trigonometry.
A right angle measures 90°. There are three angles that have greater measurement than a right angle. They are:Obtuse angles - They are angles that measure between 90° and 180°, but not exactly 90° and 180°. In other words, they measure less than 180° but greater than 90°.Straight angle - It is an angle that measure exactly 180°.Reflex angles - They are angles that measure greater than 180°.
To find the measure of an angle, you need to know the size of the entire angle and the other angles within the angle. Then, you subtract the smaller, known angles from the entire, large angle and you should get the measure of the missing angle.