35, 145 and 145 degrees
The angles are: 90 degrees, 30 degrees and 60 degrees
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.
Yes. A triangle has 180 degrees total, so if one of them is a right angle, which means it is 90 degrees, the sum of the remaining two angles is 180-90=90 degrees.
The other two angles are "acute angles". The sum of the angles in a triangle MUST add up to 180 degrees. If 90 of the degrees are used up in the right angle (the very definition of a right angle), then that leave 90 degrees to be divided up between the two remaining angles. Thus, they would both be LESS THAN 90 degrees (the very definition of an acute angle.)
To find the missing angle when given 118 vertical angles, you need to remember that vertical angles are equal. If you have one angle measuring 118 degrees, its vertical angle is also 118 degrees. Therefore, the two angles together sum to 236 degrees. If you are looking for the remaining angle in a scenario where these angles are part of a larger geometric configuration, please provide additional context to clarify the question.
Opposite angle is 45 degrees and the other 2 angles are both 135 degrees the perimeter has nothing to do with the angles.
The 3 angles of a triangle always add up to 180 degrees. You have 110 and 43, so that is 153 degrees. Subtract 153 from 180, and that is the remaining angle.
The angles are: 90 degrees, 30 degrees and 60 degrees
The sum of the angles of a triangle is 180 degrees. A right angle is 90 degrees. So the sum of the remaining two acute angles of a right triangle is 90 degrees.
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.
44 degrees
Complementary angles add up to equal 90 degrees. If one angle is already known to be 80 degrees, the remaining complement to the angle would be 10 degrees.
Yes. A triangle has 180 degrees total, so if one of them is a right angle, which means it is 90 degrees, the sum of the remaining two angles is 180-90=90 degrees.
The opposite angle is the same as the known angle. Each of the adjacent angles is the supplementary angle to the known angle. That is the pair add up to 180 degrees.
The sum of all angles in a triangle is 180 degrees. with 90 degrees (the right angle) spoken for, that leaves 45 degrees each for the remaining two angles.
The sum of interior angles of any triangle is 180 degrees. A right triangle is defined as a triangle having one angle that measures 90 degrees. Therefore, it follows that the sum of the remaining two angles will be 90 degrees 90-68=22 The third angle is 22 degrees
It is an "obtuse angle."Angles that are less than 90 degrees are "acute angles."Angles that are exactly 180 degrees are "straight angles."Angles that are exactly 90 degrees are "right angles."