Corresponding and alternate angles
Alternate exterior angles
perpendicular
Adjacent angles
adjacent angles.
because they do'nt lie on the same side of the trasversal!!
They are angles that lie on the same side of the transversal outside the lines named.
A pair of angles that lie on the same side of the transversal and on the same sides of the other two lines are called consecutive interior angles. These angles are formed when two parallel lines are cut by a transversal. According to the properties of parallel lines, consecutive interior angles are supplementary, meaning their measures add up to 180 degrees.
They are equal corresponding angles.
When two lines are cut by a transversal, the angles that are equal and lie on either side of the transversal are known as alternate interior angles or alternate exterior angles. Alternate interior angles are located between the two lines but on opposite sides of the transversal, while alternate exterior angles are found outside the two lines, also on opposite sides of the transversal. These angles are congruent when the two lines are parallel.
There is officially no term for this, but they're supplementary angles if the two lines are parallel to one another.
When a transversal line cuts through two parallel lines supplementary angles are created that add up to 180 degrees
Alternate Interior Angles
They are equal alternate angles.
Alternate exterior angles
perpendicular
Alternate angles are pairs of angles that are formed when a transversal intersects two parallel lines. There are two types of alternate angles: alternate interior angles, which lie between the two lines on opposite sides of the transversal, and alternate exterior angles, which lie outside the lines on opposite sides of the transversal. When the lines are parallel, these angles are equal in measurement. This concept is commonly used in geometry to solve problems involving angle relationships.
Those are "alternate interior" angles. They're always equal.