Supplementary angles
a linear pair!
Two adjacent angles that have noncommon sides forming a line are called supplementary angles. This means that the two angles add up to 180 degrees. The noncommon sides of the angles create a straight line, demonstrating their supplementary relationship. An example of this would be a pair of angles that share a vertex and one side, with their other sides extending in opposite directions to form a straight line.
Supplementary
No, but the can be adjacent angles. It is mathematically valid even though it serves no point.
A right angle.
a linear pair!
Not clear what exactly the question is.
adjecent angles
Adjecent Angles
If the noncommon sides of two adjacent angles form a right angle, then the angles are complementary angles.
A pair of adjacent angles whose non-common sides are opposite rays are called a linear pair. The measure of a straight angle is 180 degrees, so a linear pair of angles must add up to 180 degrees.
Supplementary
No, but the can be adjacent angles. It is mathematically valid even though it serves no point.
No, but the can be adjacent angles. It is mathematically valid even though it serves no point.
A right angle.
adjecent
Right Angle! (: