An angle of between 90 degrees and 180 degrees is called an obtuse angle, an angle that is exactly 180 degrees is called a straight angle (because it creates a straight line), and an angle of more then 180 degrees is called a reflex angle.
29 degrees
acute
All interior angles of any triangle amount to 180 degrees. 180-90-29 = 61 So the third angle will be 61 degrees.
An angle of 90 degrees is a right angle.
29 degrees.
The supplementary angle of 29 degrees is 151 degrees
An angle of between 90 degrees and 180 degrees is called an obtuse angle, an angle that is exactly 180 degrees is called a straight angle (because it creates a straight line), and an angle of more then 180 degrees is called a reflex angle.
29 degrees
acute
An angle of 90 degrees is called a right angle.
A pair of supplementary angles add up to 180 degrees. Therefore, the supplement to a 29 degree angle is equal to 180 - 29 = 151 degrees.
An angle of 6 degrees is an acute angle
Acute Angle: An angle whose measure is less than 90 degrees and greater then zero degrees is called an acute angle. Right Angle: An angle whose measure is 90 degrees is called right angle. Obtuse Angle: An angle whose measure is greater than 90 degrees and less than 180 degrees is called obtuse angle. Straight Angle: An angle whose measure is 180 degrees called a straight angle. Reflex Angle: An angle whose measure is greater than 180 degrees and less than 360 degrees is called a reflex angle. Complete Angle: An angle whose measure is 360 degrees is called a complete angle. Zero Angle: If the measure of an angle is zero it is called a zero angle.
140 degrees is an obtuse angleAn angle of 140 degrees would be called obtuse.
All interior angles of any triangle amount to 180 degrees. 180-90-29 = 61 So the third angle will be 61 degrees.
An angle of 90 degrees is a right angle.