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It is not an axiom, but a theorem.
Yes. Two obtuse angles, of equal measure.Yes. Two obtuse angles, of equal measure.Yes. Two obtuse angles, of equal measure.Yes. Two obtuse angles, of equal measure.
Its two opposite angles will be equal...
It is to bisect the angle into two equal angles.
No, a rhombus does not have two pairs of equal angles. A rhombus has opposite angles that are equal, but the other two angles are not necessarily equal.
a line or supplementary angles.
A bisected angle.
It is not an axiom, but a theorem.
Yes. Two obtuse angles, of equal measure.Yes. Two obtuse angles, of equal measure.Yes. Two obtuse angles, of equal measure.Yes. Two obtuse angles, of equal measure.
The two angles have the same measure; they are equal. An iscosceles triangle has two equal sides. It also has two equal angles, and each of these angles will be opposite one of the equal sides. The two angles will also each contain the base. The two angles must be equal.
Its two opposite angles will be equal...
If your question is "Can two complimentary angles be equal" then the answer is yes. If both angles are 45*, then they are complimentary and equal.
It is to bisect the angle into two equal angles.
No, a rhombus does not have two pairs of equal angles. A rhombus has opposite angles that are equal, but the other two angles are not necessarily equal.
There is no such triangle because if it has two equal sides then it must have two equal angles such as an isosceles triangle
a 'SCALENE' triangle. ; No equal sides, and no equal angles. An ISOSCELES triangle has two equal sides and two equal angles. An EQUILATERAL tringle has three equal sides and three equal angles all at 60 degrees. A RIGHT ANGLED triangle has one right angle (90 degrees) in it.
Two angles that are equal to 90 degrees are Complimentary.