That would be an angle of 34 degrees (complementary angles add up to 90 degrees).
90 and 56
The supplementary angle to 56 degrees is 180 - 56 = 124 degrees.
Complementary angles are angles that always add to 90° (ninety degrees). They are usually adjacent to each other, however in theory do not have to be. An example is: Angle "a" is 38°, and is situated next to, or adjacent to Angle "b" which is 52°. In this case, both angles (38 and 52) sum to ninety degrees, which means Angle a is complementary with, or to, Angle b. Another example is: Angle "a" is 56°, and is situated next to, or adjacent to Angle "b" which is 43°. In this case, both angles (56 and 43) do not sum to ninety degrees, which means Angle a is not complementary with, or to, Angle b. Complementary angles are studied in conjunction with supplementary angles (angles which sum to 180°) and angles at a point (angles which sum to 360°). Note: There does not have to be only two angles (however this is the minimum requirement, because a ninety degree angle can't have a complement of 0°). There can be three, five, ten, twenty, or whatever number of angles you wish (remember, you are not limited to there being ninety one degree angles because angles can have decimal points too, i.e. 56.32°). Hope this helped.
An Obtuse angle
The complementary angle is 56 degrees.
That would be an angle of 34 degrees (complementary angles add up to 90 degrees).
90 and 56
Two complementary angles will have a sum of 90 degrees. Therefore, the complement of a 90 degree angle would be 90 - 34 = 56 degrees.
180-56=124 degrees
90 - 56 = 34 34 degrees
The supplementary angle to 56 degrees is 180 - 56 = 124 degrees.
It is a 34 degree angle
Complementary angles only add up to 90 degrees but if you mean its supplementary angle then it is 56 degrees because they both add up to 180 degrees which are supplementary angles.
Complementary angles are angles that always add to 90° (ninety degrees). They are usually adjacent to each other, however in theory do not have to be. An example is: Angle "a" is 38°, and is situated next to, or adjacent to Angle "b" which is 52°. In this case, both angles (38 and 52) sum to ninety degrees, which means Angle a is complementary with, or to, Angle b. Another example is: Angle "a" is 56°, and is situated next to, or adjacent to Angle "b" which is 43°. In this case, both angles (56 and 43) do not sum to ninety degrees, which means Angle a is not complementary with, or to, Angle b. Complementary angles are studied in conjunction with supplementary angles (angles which sum to 180°) and angles at a point (angles which sum to 360°). Note: There does not have to be only two angles (however this is the minimum requirement, because a ninety degree angle can't have a complement of 0°). There can be three, five, ten, twenty, or whatever number of angles you wish (remember, you are not limited to there being ninety one degree angles because angles can have decimal points too, i.e. 56.32°). Hope this helped.
An expression, by word or act, of approbation, regard, confidence, civility, or admiration; a flattering speech or attention; a ceremonious greeting; as, to send one's compliments to a friend., To praise, flatter, or gratify, by expressions of approbation, respect, or congratulation; to make or pay a compliment to., To pass compliments; to use conventional expressions of respect.
The compliment of an angle is equal to 90 degrees minus the angle, therefore the compliment of 34 degrees is 90-34, thus being: 56 degrees.