All supplementary angles would be linear pairs IF they were adjacent. But they could be far apart.
They are 2-dimensional vectors.
yes
not necesarily, supplementary angles have to add up to 180degrees so they can b linear pairs if their on the same line but not always
linear
All supplementary angles would be linear pairs IF they were adjacent. But they could be far apart.
Examples of non-linear molecules include water (H2O), carbon dioxide (CO2), and ammonia (NH3). These molecules have three or more atoms, resulting in a non-linear geometry due to the arrangement of atoms and lone pairs of electrons around the central atom.
Yes, they are.
They are 2-dimensional vectors.
yes
yes
yes
not necesarily, supplementary angles have to add up to 180degrees so they can b linear pairs if their on the same line but not always
The electron domain geometry for CS2 is linear, as sulfur has two bonding pairs and no lone pairs of electrons around it.
linear
linear
Yes, they are.