Subtract 35 from 90 to get the complementary angle. If you're looking for supplementary subtract from 180. 90-35 =55 . . . The Complementary angle = 55
It is the supplementary angle of 125 degrees which is 55 degrees
No angle can be complementary to a 140 degree angle, as the sum of complementary angles is 90 degrees. But angles which are supplementary to each other add together to form a 180 degree angle.
Two angles are complementary if their sum equals exactly 90 degrees. Two angles are supplementary if their sum equals exactly 180 degrees, so a 30 degree angle is supplementary with a 150 degree angle.
An impossibility because complementary angles add up to 90 degrees but if its a supplementary angle then 180-105 = 75 degrees
The sum of complementary angles is 90°. The sum of supplementary angles is 180°. EXAMPLE : 27° is the complementary angle to 63° and the supplementary angle to 153°.
It is complementary to one angle, supplementary to another.
A supplementary angle can not be a complementary angle. The complementary angle has 2 angles equal 90... but a supplementary angle is X2 that much (108). * * * * * Nearly correct. 90 x 2 is 180, not 108!
Complementary angles are found by subtracting a random angle from 90 degrees for complementary always and 180 for supplementary always
supplementary: 107 degrees complementary: 17 degrees
For any given angle, its supplementary angle is 90 degrees larger than its complementary angle.
No, they are supplementary, not complementary.
Supplementary angles forms a 180o angle (or a straight line). Complementary angles form a 90o angle.
It is 120-degree angle are supplementary.
The methods are subtraction. -- Subtract an angle from 90° to find its complementary angle. -- Subtract an angle from 180° to find its supplementary angle.
No, an obtuse angle cannot be both complementary and supplementary because the measures of complementary angles add up to 90 degrees, while the measures of supplementary angles add up to 180 degrees. An obtuse angle has a measure greater than 90 degrees, so it can only be supplementary, not complementary.
a complementary angle