I'll go out on a limb here, make a possibly unwarranted assumption, rush in with no concern for my personal welfare to a place where angels fear to tread, and presume that you're talking about the angle formed by the hour- and minute hands of an old fashioned clock. On that assumption, I count eleven (11) of them.
79 degrees
The sum of the interior angles is 180(11-2)=1620 now since there are 11 of these each interior angle has measure 1620/11 or 147.273 degrees
169 degrees
It is: 11 degrees
Your run should always be longer than the rise. Current International Residential Code states the rise cannot be greater than 7-3/4" and the run cannot be less than 10". A common stair stringer has a 7" rise with a 11" run. rip your stair tread to 12" , this will over hang the run on the stringer by 1", when you install your toe kicks, use 3/4" material and you will wind up with a 1/4" overhang on each tread. Of course there are different ways to do this, but I believe this is most common.
A "tread" and a "run" are the same thing. Your question negates itself. However, if what you meant was an 11" riser and a 7" tread, then what you are describing is a ladder, as it would have an angle greater than 50 degrees. Ideally, you should reverse the dimensions, in which case then, yes, a 1" overhang is appropriate.
Mitch Stringer was born on 1983-11-11.
Lou Stringer is 5' 11".
George Stringer died on 1957-11-10.
Normally 7" rise and 11" run.
Nosing is not taken into account when calculating initial stair set-out, but added later. The rise of a residential stair in the US is 8" and the run is 10" with a nose of 1". This means that the tread depth is 10", the height from stair to stair is 8" and the tread sticks out 1" over the the tread below. It is still 10" from front to back. A commercial stair is 7" rise, 11" run, 1" nose.
Hawaii Five-O - 1968 Stringer 11-17 was released on: USA: 22 February 1979 UK: 3 August 1979
Lou Stringer is 5 feet 11 inches tall. He weighs 173 pounds. He bats right and throws right.
The complement of 11 is the angle that when added to 11 forms a right angle (90° ).
In 1949, Lou Stringer played in 35 games, all for the Boston Red Sox, and batting in all of them. He had 41 at bats, getting 11 hits, for a .268 batting average, with 6 runs batted in. He was walked 5 times. He struck out 10 times. He hit 4 doubles, 0 triples, and 1 home run.
x - 11 degrees, where x is the measure of the angle you started with.