It is: 79 degrees
It is an angle of 79 degrees because 79+101 = 180 degrees
Supplementary angles add up to 180 degrees. If one angle = 130 degrees the other must be 180 - 130 = 50 degrees
No, an obtuse angle cannot be both complementary and supplementary because the measures of complementary angles add up to 90 degrees, while the measures of supplementary angles add up to 180 degrees. An obtuse angle has a measure greater than 90 degrees, so it can only be supplementary, not complementary.
112.5 degrees
Is it not a supplementary angle. A complementary angle is 90 degrees, so I think that supplementary would be 180 degrees.
It is 75 degrees
It measures 104 degrees
79 degrees
Supplementary angles add up to 180 degrees so it is 100 degrees
180-105 = 75 degrees
Supplementary angles are angles that add up to 180 degrees, ie. a straight angle. Therefore, the angle supplementary to 101 degrees would be 180-101=79 degrees.
It is an angle of 79 degrees because 79+101 = 180 degrees
Supplementary angles are two angles that measure up to 180 degrees. EXAMPLE: If the an angle measures 70 degrees, to find the missing angle, you subtract 70 from 180 because supplementary angles equal 180 degrees. Your answer (in this case 110) is the answer for the measure of the missing angle.
Supplementary angles add up to 180 degrees. If one angle = 130 degrees the other must be 180 - 130 = 50 degrees
No, an obtuse angle cannot be both complementary and supplementary because the measures of complementary angles add up to 90 degrees, while the measures of supplementary angles add up to 180 degrees. An obtuse angle has a measure greater than 90 degrees, so it can only be supplementary, not complementary.
If two angles are supplementary, and one angle measures 30 degrees, then the second angle must measure 150 degrees. This is because by definition if two angles are supplementary, then they must up to 180 degrees.
An impossibility because complementary angles add up to 90 degrees but if its a supplementary angle then 180-105 = 75 degrees