Actually, It is this.
Question: Angle 1 and 4 are called ___ angles?
Answer: Supplementary
Vertical-A+I believe the answer would be 2 ninety degree angles
which pairs of angles in the figure below are vertical angles
they are congruent: exactly equal
Charles is correct
ISN and TSW TSN and ISW
They are equal vertical opposite angles or 2 pairs of equal angles.
Vertical-A+I believe the answer would be 2 ninety degree angles
which pairs of angles in the figure below are vertical angles
If the two lines are parallel, then you get 4 pairs of vertical angles. If the two lines are not parallel, then we get 6 pairs of vertical angles.
?
We'll get a n number of vertical angles (pairs)
No. An angle can have only one angle!
yes
Those are "vertical" angles, even if there's nothing vertical about them.
Vertical AngleThey form vertical angles
No, vertical angles are not always supplements of each other. Vertical angles are formed when two lines intersect, creating two pairs of opposite angles that are equal in measure. While they are congruent, they are not supplementary unless they specifically measure 180 degrees together, which is not the case for all pairs of vertical angles.
4 angles