Yes.
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No, right angles are 90 degrees, supplementary and vertical angles are 180 degrees.
Vertical angles are equal in measure and are formed when two lines intersect. Complementary angles, on the other hand, add up to a total of 90 degrees. They are not directly related, but if two lines intersect and form vertical angles, then the angles adjacent to the vertical angles will be complementary.
Yes, they can, if they are both 90 degrees.
One right angle is equal to 90 degrees, or a vertical line extending from the o degree plane. Therefore, two right angles, presumably side to side, would have 180 degrees, since together the would be supplementary angles. Supplementary angles are two angles which combine to from 180 degrees, and 90 plus 90 would equal 180 degrees. Look at angle DBE and at angle EBC. Each are 90 degree angles, or right angles, and together equal 180 degrees.
Two angles that have a sum of 90 degrees are called complementary angles.