The complement of an acute angle A is the angle 90° - A. The complement of 13° is 77°.
Supplement angle: 180-65.8 = 114.2 degrees Complement angle: 90-65.8 = 24.2 degrees
Complement = 90 degrees.
The angle is 50 and its compliment is 40.
12 degrees
an angle that is 54 degrees less than 4 times its complement
The complement to an angle is how much it takes to make 90 degrees. The complement to 30 degrees is 60 degrees. The complement to 45 degrees is 45 degrees.
An angle and its complement add to 90 degrees. Hence an angle of 41 degrees has 49 degrees as its complement.
Angle + Its Complement = 90 degrees Angle = Its Complement + 8 degrees2*(Its Complement) + 8 degrees = 90 degrees2*(Its Complement) = 82 degreesIts Complement = 41 degreesAngle + 41 degrees = 90 degreesAngle = 49 degrees
The supplement of an angle is the angle that, when added to the original angle, equals 180 degrees. The complement of an angle is the angle that, when added to the original angle, equals 90 degrees. Therefore, the supplement of the complement of a 38-degree angle would be the angle that, when added to the complement of 38 degrees (52 degrees), equals 180 degrees. This angle would be 128 degrees.
No. An angle is (90 minus its complement) degrees. The definition of the complement is "90 degrees minus the original angle".
Subtract the angle from 90 degrees and you have the complement Subtract the angle from 180 degrees and you have the supplement
The complement is 60 degrees.
The complement of any angle is the angle which adds to it to make 90 degrees. In this instance, an angle of 60 degrees adds to 30 to make 90 degrees. Therefore, the complement of 30 degrees is 60 degrees.
Suppose the angle is x degrees. Then its complement is 90 - x deg So 90 - x = 4*x ie 90 = 5x or x = 18 degrees.
It is 9 degrees because complementary angles add up to 90 degrees
The sum of an angle and its complement is 90 degrees. So the unknown angle must be 90 - 75 = 15 degrees.