Any angle that is supplementary is also adjacent. Two examples of a set of adjacent, supplementary angles are: 89 degrees and 91 degrees; or 100 degrees and 80 degrees.
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Supplementary angles are two angles whose measures add to 180 degrees. Adjacent angles are two angles that happen to lie next to each other, so that they combine to form a larger angle whose measure is the sum of the measures of the adjacent angles. Angles may be both adjacent and supplementary, in which case they will form a straight angle.
Supplementary adjacent angles add up to 180 degrees
Yes, they can be adjacent as well as supplementary.
Supplementary angles.
In the context of two parallel lines and an intercept, they are called interior angles.