180 - 32 = 148; 148/2 = 74 which is the smaller angle so the larger is 106
For angle L, the adjacent angle o, and its opposite angle M, are both 158 degrees. (it's a rhomboid) In a parallelogram, adjacent angles total 180 degrees (they are supplementary), since the opposite angles must be the same and there are two of each.
The intersecting lines of a rectangle are at ninety degrees while the intersecting lines that form a parallelogram may be greater than or less than ninety degrees.
A rectangle is a special case of a parallelogram in which all the interior angles are 90 degrees.
In a parallelogram adjacent angles are supplementary, so angles are 75 degrees (A & C) and 105 degrees (B & D).
A rectangle is a special form of parallelogram that has adjacent sides perpendicular to each other or all the inside angles are 90 degrees.
You do not need to find. If it is a parallelogram, it must be 180 degrees.
The main difference between a rectangle and a parallelogram that makes rectangle a special case of the parallelogram is the fact that all the angles of a rectangle are equal to 90 degrees. This is not the case in a parallelogram because the adjacent angles are only supplementary to each other.
No, only in a square (regular parallelogram).The opposite angles are EQUAL in a parallelogram, and the adjacent angles are SUPPLEMENTARY(they equal 180 degrees).So if any angle in a parallelogram is a right angle, they all are. Otherwise, there are no right angles.The angles of a parallelogram will average 90 degrees, as there are 360 degrees in any quadrilateral, (360/4 - 90) and 180 degrees in two adjacent non-equal angles (180/2 = 90).
That would give you a sum total of 180 degrees for all 4 angles inside the parallelogram, but it needs to be 360 degrees.
In a parallelogram adjacent angles are supplementary, so angles are 75 degrees (A & C) and 105 degrees (B & D).
For angle L, the adjacent angle o, and its opposite angle M, are both 158 degrees. (it's a rhomboid) In a parallelogram, adjacent angles total 180 degrees (they are supplementary), since the opposite angles must be the same and there are two of each.
The intersecting lines of a rectangle are at ninety degrees while the intersecting lines that form a parallelogram may be greater than or less than ninety degrees.
In a parallelogram adjacent angles are supplementary, so angles are 75 degrees (A & C) and 105 degrees (B & D).
A parallelogram has 4 sides and 4 angles that add up to 360 degrees whereas a triangle has 3 sides and 3 angles that add up to 180 degrees.
A rectangle is a special case of a parallelogram in which all the interior angles are 90 degrees.
In a parallelogram adjacent angles are supplementary, so angles are 75 degrees (A & C) and 105 degrees (B & D).
A rectangle is a special form of parallelogram that has adjacent sides perpendicular to each other or all the inside angles are 90 degrees.