They are allied angles that add up to 180 degrees
same side interior
A pair of two angles whose sum is equivalent to 180 degrees are called supplementary angles. If you have two parallel lines cut by a transversal, then the two angles on the same side of the transversal are called same side interior angles. They add up to 180 also. Glad I could help! :D
A transversal line that cuts through parallel lines creates equal corresponding angles and equal alternate angles
1. Alternate Interior Angles 2. Alternate Exterior Angles 3. Corresponding Angles 4. Same-Side Interior Angles 5. Same-Side Exterior Angles
Two pairs.
same side interior
They are equal corresponding angles.
A pair of two angles whose sum is equivalent to 180 degrees are called supplementary angles. If you have two parallel lines cut by a transversal, then the two angles on the same side of the transversal are called same side interior angles. They add up to 180 also. Glad I could help! :D
A transversal line that cuts through parallel lines creates equal corresponding angles and equal alternate angles
supplementary
Yes (assuming all three lines are in the same plane).
1. Alternate Interior Angles 2. Alternate Exterior Angles 3. Corresponding Angles 4. Same-Side Interior Angles 5. Same-Side Exterior Angles
Two pairs.
More info needed. Are the 2 lines parallel, perpendicular, or? are the angles that you are interested in on opposite sides of the intersecting line or the same side. The intersecting line is called a transversal. If the original lines are parallel, angles between the 2 lines on opposite sides of the transversal are called alternate interior angles, etc.
There's lots of useful things you can discover when parallel lines are cut by a transversal, most of them having to do with angle relationships. Corresponding angles are congruent, alternate interior angles are congruent, same side or consecutive interior angles are supplementary, alternate exterior angles are congruent, and vertical angles are congruent.
Same Side Interior angles are the angle pairs that are on the insides of the two lines (the interior) and on the same side of the transversala experior angle of a triangle is = to the 2 opposit interior angles of the triangle.If that's not what you are looking for sorry.
There is officially no term for this, but they're supplementary angles if the two lines are parallel to one another.