No, angles cannot be both vertical and complementary at the same time. Vertical angles are formed by the intersection of two lines and are opposite each other, sharing the same vertex, while complementary angles are two angles whose measures add up to 90 degrees. Since vertical angles are equal in measure, they cannot sum to 90 degrees unless they are both 45 degrees, which would not satisfy the definition of being vertical angles.
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.
No, a pair of angles cannot be both vertical and complementary at the same time. Vertical angles are formed by the intersection of two lines and are always equal in measure. Complementary angles, on the other hand, are two angles whose measures add up to 90 degrees. Since vertical angles are equal, they would only be complementary if each angle measures 45 degrees, which is not generally the case.
True. Vertical angles are formed by the intersection of two lines and are always equal in measure, while complementary angles are two angles whose measures add up to 90 degrees. Since vertical angles can be any angle measure and are equal, they cannot be complementary unless both angles happen to be 45 degrees, which is not the case in general.
A pair of angles can be either supplementary or complementary, but not both simultaneously. Supplementary angles sum to 180 degrees, while complementary angles sum to 90 degrees. Therefore, a pair of angles cannot satisfy both conditions at the same time.
No,neither one can, since by definition a pair of complementary angles add to 90 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.
No, a pair of angles cannot be both vertical and complementary at the same time. Vertical angles are formed by the intersection of two lines and are always equal in measure. Complementary angles, on the other hand, are two angles whose measures add up to 90 degrees. Since vertical angles are equal, they would only be complementary if each angle measures 45 degrees, which is not generally the case.
True. Vertical angles are formed by the intersection of two lines and are always equal in measure, while complementary angles are two angles whose measures add up to 90 degrees. Since vertical angles can be any angle measure and are equal, they cannot be complementary unless both angles happen to be 45 degrees, which is not the case in general.
Not necessarily. The only time complementary angles are congruent is when they are both 45o. Complementary means the angles add up to be 90o.
A pair of angles can be either supplementary or complementary, but not both simultaneously. Supplementary angles sum to 180 degrees, while complementary angles sum to 90 degrees. Therefore, a pair of angles cannot satisfy both conditions at the same time.
No,neither one can, since by definition a pair of complementary angles add to 90 degrees
Vertical angles are always, by definition, congruent. Note: If the two vertical angles are right angles then they are both congruent and supplementary.
Vertical angles can be supplementary angles if the lines are perpendicular and then both of the vertical angles would be 90 digress.
yes
Complementary means that the sum of the angles is 90 degrees.Supplementary means that the sum of the angles is 180 degrees. It can't be both.
In every pair of complementary angles, both of them are acute angles.
Yes they are both the measure of angles and complementary angles add up to 90 degrees while supplementary angles add up to 180 degrees