No, it must be obtuse.
yes. the supplement adds to the acute angle to make 180 degrees. An acute angle is less than 90 degrees. Example: acute angle is 30 degrees. 180-30 is 150, which is obtuse.
yes complement is 90-angle and supplement 180-angle
a acute angle
It is also a right angle Supplement = 180 - angle = 180-90 = 90 = right angle
No, it must be obtuse.
yes. the supplement adds to the acute angle to make 180 degrees. An acute angle is less than 90 degrees. Example: acute angle is 30 degrees. 180-30 is 150, which is obtuse.
obtuse
yes complement is 90-angle and supplement 180-angle
To find the supplement of an acute angle, do the following. Supplements must add to 180 degrees, therefore: x=the measure of the acute angle 180-x is the equasion to find the supplement Good Question!
If one angle is the supplement of another, we know that their sum is 180 degrees.So let one angle be A and the supplement be B. We know the measure of A+B=180.If A is acute that means its measure is less than 90 degrees. The supplement must therefore have measure more than 90 degrees. We could say the supplement of an acute angle must be an obtuse angle. Remember obtuse angle is one that less than 180 degrees and more than 90.
An angle of 144 degrees would.
An obtuse angle is one over 90 degrees. If you are looking for the supplement it means that both angles have to equal 180 degrees. So the supplement of an obtuse angle would be an acute angle.
An acute angle is an angle that is between 0 and 90 degrees. The supplement of the angle is 180 degrees minus the magnitude of the angle. Since the original angle is greater than 0 degrees, the supplement must be less than 180-0 = 180 degrees. Since the original angle is less than 90 degrees, the supplement must be greater than 180-90 = 90 degrees. Thuis, the supplement measures between 90 and 180 degrees - that is, it is an obtuse angle.
an acute angle is an angle anywhere between 0 and 90 degrees
It is acute
a acute angle