can't be determined
yes because a supplementary angle is two angles where the sum of the angles is 180 degrees.
Supplementary
whenever you have a supplementary angle, you know that both of the angles in the supplementary angles will add up to 180 degrees. if that's what you meant
If the question refers to the total angle on a straight line then the angles are adjacent and supplementary - the angles total 180° .
Supplementary angles are angles whose sum is 180° . The supplementary angle to 110° is therefore 70°.
Two adjacent angles are considered supplementary angles. They aggregate and make an angle that measures 180 degrees.
Supplementary angles are two angles whose measures add to 180 degrees. Adjacent angles are two angles that happen to lie next to each other, so that they combine to form a larger angle whose measure is the sum of the measures of the adjacent angles. Angles may be both adjacent and supplementary, in which case they will form a straight angle.
yes because a supplementary angle is two angles where the sum of the angles is 180 degrees.
88 and 92 are supplementary angles
Any angle that is supplementary is also adjacent. Two examples of a set of adjacent, supplementary angles are: 89 degrees and 91 degrees; or 100 degrees and 80 degrees.
2 supplementary adjacent angles for a straight angle.
Supplementary
The opposite angle is the same as the known angle. Each of the adjacent angles is the supplementary angle to the known angle. That is the pair add up to 180 degrees.
whenever you have a supplementary angle, you know that both of the angles in the supplementary angles will add up to 180 degrees. if that's what you meant
They are called supplementary angles.
90 degrees is the angle
always