Two angles are considered vertical angles when their sides form two pairs of opposite rays, typically created by the intersection of two lines. While vertical angles themselves are not adjacent, they can appear adjacent when they share a common ray or vertex in certain configurations, particularly in cases where additional lines or angles are involved. However, in the strict sense, vertical angles are always opposite each other and not adjacent. The confusion arises from specific geometric arrangements where other angles may be present.
true
true
Select one: a. False; the angles may be supplementary. b. True c. False; one angle may be in the interior of the other. d. False; the angles may be adjacent.
If the lines are perpindicular then each pair of vertical angles are supplementary
Adjacent angles cannot overlap because they share a common vertex and a common side but do not cover the same area. By definition, adjacent angles are formed when two angles are next to each other without any shared interior points. If they were to overlap, they would not be considered adjacent; rather, they would form a single angle.
true
sometime true
Sometimes
Sometimes but not always depending on what type of polygon it is and supplementary angles add up to 180 degrees
true
true
they discovered SEX:D
Select one: a. False; the angles may be supplementary. b. True c. False; one angle may be in the interior of the other. d. False; the angles may be adjacent.
That they are congruent.
If the lines are perpindicular then each pair of vertical angles are supplementary
false
true for A+ studentsraynaray