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.
no
90 degrees each
They can be but not always because supplementary angles add up to 180 degrees.
No, supplementary angles just add up to 180 degrees. It does not matter how these 180 degrees are distributed.
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.
no
90 degrees each
90 degrees is the angle
supplementary angles are equal to 180 degrees. so two congruent(same) angles would be 90 degrees!
They can be but not always because supplementary angles add up to 180 degrees.
They can be but not always because supplementary angles add up to 180 degrees.
No, supplementary angles just add up to 180 degrees. It does not matter how these 180 degrees are distributed.
Not always. If two angles are congruent then they simply have equal measure. They must only be right angles if they are supplementary, that is, they must both add up to 180 degrees.
Angles that are congruent and supplementary must be right angles.
Only if they both equal 90 degrees.
supplementary angles add up to 180 degrees