sometimes,, you can have an odtuse angle 85 degrees and acute 23 degrees which is a total 108 degrees.
no because supplementary means when 2 angles equal 180 degrees. but an acute angle is always less than 90 degrees, so two acute angles cannot add up to equal 180 degrees/be supplementary.
Right angle, obtuse angle, acute angle, supplementary angle, complementary angle, interior angle, exterior angle, adjacent angle
Yes, unless they are both right angles.
yes it is.for example 120 degrees and 60 degrees
yes
sometimes,, you can have an odtuse angle 85 degrees and acute 23 degrees which is a total 108 degrees.
If the obtuse angle on a straight line is 148 degrees, then the acute angle would be the supplementary angle to the obtuse angle on the same line. The sum of the measures of two supplementary angles is always 180 degrees, so the acute angle would be 180 - 148 = 32 degrees.
Supplementary angles total 180o. If one of the angles is acute it is less than 90o so its supplement must be greater than 90o, so it can never be acute.
no because supplementary means when 2 angles equal 180 degrees. but an acute angle is always less than 90 degrees, so two acute angles cannot add up to equal 180 degrees/be supplementary.
Right angle, obtuse angle, acute angle, supplementary angle, complementary angle, interior angle, exterior angle, adjacent angle
Yes, unless they are both right angles.
the sum of two acute angles which add up to 180 degree is known as or called as supplementary angle.
yes it is.for example 120 degrees and 60 degrees
Yes because supplementary angles add up to 180 degrees.
If x is acute, then x < 90 and -x > -90. Adding 180 to both sides, 180-x > 90, i.e. the supplement of x is obtuse.
Sometimes. Actually, it is nearly always, but not quite.