Supplementary Congruency Theorem
They are congruent angles
They are supplementary
Same-side interior angles are supplementary. They are not always congruent, but in a regular polygon adjacent angles are congruent.
two congruent angles that adds up to 180
If one angle is right, then all angles are right. The diagonals of a parallelogram bisect each other. Opposite angles are congruent. Opposite sides are congruent. Consecutive angles are supplementary.
Angles that are congruent and supplementary must be right angles.
if two angles are supplements of the same angle (or of congruent angles), then the two angles are congruent.
They are congruent angles
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.
Vertical angles are always, by definition, congruent. Note: If the two vertical angles are right angles then they are both congruent and supplementary.
congruent
Congruent *apex
They are supplementary
Give us a break! -- A 3° angle is congruent to another 3° angle, but their sum is only 6° , not 180°. -- Congruent angles are always equal, but supplementary angles don't have to be equal.
Same-side interior angles are supplementary. They are not always congruent, but in a regular polygon adjacent angles are congruent.
supplementary angles are equal to 180 degrees. so two congruent(same) angles would be 90 degrees!
Congruent.