Yes they do, love your question
Not necessarily. While supplementary angles add up to 180 degrees, they do not have to be adjacent or form a linear pair. A linear pair consists of two adjacent angles that are supplementary and share a common ray. Therefore, while all linear pairs are supplementary, not all supplementary angles are linear pairs.
These will be supplementary angles.
Yes.
No, angles that form a linear pair are supplementary.
No, vertical angles are not a linear pair. Vertical angles are formed when two lines intersect, creating pairs of opposite angles that are equal in measure. A linear pair consists of two adjacent angles that sum to 180 degrees and share a common side. While vertical angles may be supplementary to other angles, they are not adjacent and do not form a linear pair.
Not necessarily. While supplementary angles add up to 180 degrees, they do not have to be adjacent or form a linear pair. A linear pair consists of two adjacent angles that are supplementary and share a common ray. Therefore, while all linear pairs are supplementary, not all supplementary angles are linear pairs.
True only if the two angles are adjacent (i.e. have a point in common). By definition, supplementary angles add up to 180° therefore they are linear pairs, if they are adjacent. Otherwise false. Imagine drawing an angle of 40° at the top of the page and another of 140° at the bottom. These angles are supplementary but not a linear pair.
These will be supplementary angles.
If they do , the angles are supplementary !
Yes.
supplementary
No, angles that form a linear pair are supplementary.
No, vertical angles are not a linear pair. Vertical angles are formed when two lines intersect, creating pairs of opposite angles that are equal in measure. A linear pair consists of two adjacent angles that sum to 180 degrees and share a common side. While vertical angles may be supplementary to other angles, they are not adjacent and do not form a linear pair.
Supplementary angles do not have to be next to one another but, they can be parts of two different shapes.
yes
A trapezoid.
They are called a linear pair.