(180°-x) + (90°-x) = 240°
270° - 2x = 240°
30° = 2x
15° = x
The measure of the angle is 15°.
The supplement is 165°, the complement is 75°, and their sum is 240°.
The supplement of an angle is found by subtracting the angle's measure from 180 degrees. Therefore, if an angle measures 43 degrees, its supplement is calculated as 180 - 43 = 137 degrees. Thus, the supplement of a 43-degree angle is 137 degrees.
Complement of an angle = (90 - the given angle) Here we have this = (90 - 16) = 74 degrees
180 - 30
The supplement of an angle is found by subtracting the angle from 180 degrees. For angle B, which measures 32 degrees, the supplement can be calculated as follows: 180 - 32 = 148 degrees. Therefore, the measure of the angle supplement of B is 148 degrees.
The supplement of A is 180 - A The complement of A is 90 - A So, 180 - A = 2*(90 - A) + 20 or 180 - A = 180 - 2A + 20 So A = 20 degrees
33
An angle of 108 degrees does not have a complement because is greater than 90 degrees. Its supplement angle has a measure of 180 - 108 = 72 degrees.
Angle=54oComplement: 90-54=36oSupplement: 180-54=126o
Complement . . . another angle, of 53 degrees Supplement . . . another angle, of 143 degrees
19 degrees and 109 degrees respectively
26 degrees
60 degrees
74 degrees
The measure of an angle whose complement is four ninths its supplement?æ is 18 degrees. It is calculated as follows: let y be the angle, its complement will be (90-y) degrees and its supplement will be (180-y)?æ degrees and?æ since it complement is?æ 4/9 its supplement; then?æ it is?æ?æ(90-y)= 4/9(180-y).?æ Hence, you will get 18 degrees when you solve the equation.
The difference between 90 degrees and an angle is its complement. 90 - 62 = 28 degrees.
An angle and its complement sum to ninety degrees. 90-52=38
The supplement of an angle is found by subtracting the angle's measure from 180 degrees. Therefore, if an angle measures 43 degrees, its supplement is calculated as 180 - 43 = 137 degrees. Thus, the supplement of a 43-degree angle is 137 degrees.