All the angles of a square are 90 degrees.
to find missing angles you are dealing with complementry and suplementry angles. Suplementry angles add up to 180 degrees so you must subtract what given angle you have from 180 and you come up with youre missing angle. This rule also gos for complementry but the angles must add up to 90 degrees
To answer that, we would have to know what kind of relationship there is between the two given angles and the missing one. You haven't told us anything about how they're related.
Right angles aren't formed by other angles - it is already an angle itself. However, if you bisect a right angle, it becomes two acute angles.
The opposite angles of a rhombus are congruent. So the angle opposite to the given angle is also 35 degrees. The consecutive angles of a rhombus are supplementary (add up to 180 degrees). So the supplement angle of the given angle is 145 degrees (180 - 35), and the angle opposite to that angle also will be 145 degrees.
You must use the formulas you know that describe the properties of triangles to relate the information you're given to the size of the unknown angle. Do you want to know the measurement / size of the angle. The internal angles of a triangle add up to 180 degrees. If you know two angles then add them together eg 60 + 30 = 90 now subtract 90 from 180, 180-90 = 90 So the missing angle is 90 degrees
180 minus two known angles = unknown angle
to find missing angles you are dealing with complementry and suplementry angles. Suplementry angles add up to 180 degrees so you must subtract what given angle you have from 180 and you come up with youre missing angle. This rule also gos for complementry but the angles must add up to 90 degrees
It depends on what your measuring and the measure of the other given angles. "X" is also known as the missing angle. ex. In triangle ABC, the measure of angle A is 40 and the measure of angle B is 80 find the missing angle. answer- Angle C would be 60 because a triangle's angles add up to 180 degrees.
A square or a rectangle would fit the given description
To answer that, we would have to know what kind of relationship there is between the two given angles and the missing one. You haven't told us anything about how they're related.
Remote interior angles
-- Collect all of the information you're given ... such as the dimensions of the circle or of additional lines drawn inside the circle or touching it, and the size of other angles that are not missing. -- Recall and collect the various laws, relations, and formulas you know that relate to circles, or to whatever other shapes have been added to the drawing you have of the circle with the missing angle. -- Identify one or two of the mathematical or geometric operations you know that can make the connection between the given information and the missing angle.
Right angles aren't formed by other angles - it is already an angle itself. However, if you bisect a right angle, it becomes two acute angles.
The opposite angles of a rhombus are congruent. So the angle opposite to the given angle is also 35 degrees. The consecutive angles of a rhombus are supplementary (add up to 180 degrees). So the supplement angle of the given angle is 145 degrees (180 - 35), and the angle opposite to that angle also will be 145 degrees.
You must use the formulas you know that describe the properties of triangles to relate the information you're given to the size of the unknown angle. Do you want to know the measurement / size of the angle. The internal angles of a triangle add up to 180 degrees. If you know two angles then add them together eg 60 + 30 = 90 now subtract 90 from 180, 180-90 = 90 So the missing angle is 90 degrees
They can be: acute, right angle, obtuse or reflex
The 'included side' is the side between the two given angles. The 'included angle' is the angle between the two given sides.