The supplemental angle to an angle measure 132° is an angle measuring 114°. The supplement of an angle is another angle whose measure, when added to the original angle, will result in a measure of 180°. Given an angle that is 132°, we can find the supplement's measure by subtracting this angle from 180°. 180° - 132° = 114°
48 degrees.
It is an obtuse angle because it is greater than 90 but less than 180 degrees
84+48=132 - 180 = 48 degrees The Answer is 48 Degrees.
No 132 is not a square number because every number up to 132 times its self does not equal 132 and a square number is a number that is a multiple of 1 number times itself so 132 is not a square number.
The supplemental angle to an angle measure 132° is an angle measuring 114°. The supplement of an angle is another angle whose measure, when added to the original angle, will result in a measure of 180°. Given an angle that is 132°, we can find the supplement's measure by subtracting this angle from 180°. 180° - 132° = 114°
All supplementary angles add up to 180 degrees. If one angle is 132 degrees, how much more would the other angle need to be to total 180? Subtract 132 from 180 for the answer.
Obtuse... like me.
48 degrees.
It's an obtuse angle. Not exactly, an obtuse angle is an angle that is more than 90 degrees.
Any angle past 90 degrees is called an obtuse angle.
Obtuse angle
132
It is an obtuse angle because it is greater than 90 but less than 180 degrees
It is: 180-48 = 132 degrees
Supplementary angles add up to 180, so the supplement angle would be the difference between the angle and 180 degrees.So: 180 - 48 = 132 degrees
Complements are defined for angles, not trigonometric ratios of angles.