Supplementary Congruency Theorem
yes because a supplementary angle is two angles where the sum of the angles is 180 degrees.
Corresponding angles in similar figures should be the same, not supplementary.
Supplementary angles have a sum of 180 degrees.
They both will be right angles that add up to supplementary angles 180 degrees
supplementary angles are equal to 180 degrees. so two congruent(same) angles would be 90 degrees!
No, a pair of angles that are supplementary will always have a sum of 180 degrees, while a pair of angles that are congruent will have the same measure. Therefore, it is not possible for a pair of angles to be both supplementary and congruent.
if two angles are supplements of the same angle (or of congruent angles), then the two angles are congruent.
Supplementary Congruency Theorem
Yes.Yes.Yes.Yes.
a straight line
Two acute angles cannot be supplementary but they can be complementary
Supplementary angles are two angles which add up to 180°.
Supplementary angles - two angles that add up to 180 degrees. No matter how large or small angles 1 and 2 on the left become, the two angles remain supplementary which means that they add up to 180°. By the way, supplementary angles do not need to be adjacent angles(angles next to one another) if it doesnt add up to 180 then they are not supplementary angles, but if they do then they are supplementary angles.
Two supplementary angles add up to 180 degrees
Supplementary angles total 180 degrees.
Yes. A supplementary angle is two angles with a common ray that equal 180 degrees.