I'm going to assume that side "c" is the hypotenuse of a right triangle.... you would take the sin(23) = 32/c sin (23) = .391 so.... .391 = 32/c Solving for c gives you approximately c = 81.8
to find the complement, subtract 23 from 90. so the answer is 67 degrees
Complement . . . another angle, of 53 degrees Supplement . . . another angle, of 143 degrees
Oh honey, that's a cute little angle you got there. A 23 degree angle is called an acute angle, sweetie. It's less than 90 degrees, in case you were wondering. Keep on measuring those angles, darling!
The complementary angle is 15 degrees. Complementary angles sum to 90 degrees, and 90 - 75 = 15.
The sum of the interior angles of any regular polygon of n sides is equal to 180(n - 2) degrees. Each angle would be 164.35 degrees
90 - 23 = 67 degrees
to find the complement, subtract 23 from 90. so the answer is 67 degrees
An angle of 23 degrees is an acute angle because it is greater than 0 but less than 90 degrees.
It is an angle whose measure is 23/360 of a full rotation.
The complementary angle is 67 degrees.
23 degrees and 67 degrees
Also 23 degrees.
Since the opposite side is not the longest one in the triangle, you're not describing the right angle. Knowing the lengths of the opposite side and the adjacent side of one of the acute angles allows us to immediately calculate the tangent of the angle. The tangent is (14/23) and the angle is 31.3 degrees. (rounded)
23 degrees
It is: 23 degrees+67 degrees = 90 degrees
Complement . . . another angle, of 53 degrees Supplement . . . another angle, of 143 degrees
Two angles are complementary if they both add up to 90 degrees. This means that a complementary angle would have to be negative 23 degrees if the given angle is 113 (-23+113=90) . However I suspect that you are looking for the supplementary angle. Supplementary angles total 180 degrees. If so, the supplement would be 77 degrees.