A complement of an acute angle must be an acute angle. An acute angle is an angle whose measure is more than 0 degrees but less than 90 degrees. For example, even if the angle was the minimum 1 degree, the complement is still 89 degrees, which is still acute. Therefore, any combination of a complement of an acute angle MUST be acute.
An angle of 60 degrees is an acute angle
an angle with a acute and right angle
It is an acute angle.
Acute
89.999... degrees. An acute angle is any degree under 90.
89 degrees
An acute angle is greater than 0 but less than 90 degrees So its greatest angle is anything below 90 degrees, but not including 90 degrees.
A right triangle is a triangle with one of its angles being 90o. The requirements for the other two angles are that they both be acute and total to 90o. Therefore, the largest possible acute angle in a right triangle is 89.99999...o.
1 acute angle = 1 acute angle
That is an acute angle. An obtuse angle is not acute.
An acute angle
acute angle
An acute angle is an angle less than 90°. So an angle of 17° is an acute angle.
The 4 to 1 ratio of the two acute angles can be restated as the larger acute angle is four times as large as the smaller acute angle. Since the sum of all angles in a triangle equal 180 degrees, the sum of the two acute angles will be equal to 90 degrees. The remaining 90 degrees are found in the right angle present in all right triangles. If we divide the 90 degrees of the acute angles by 5 (to get the five parts of our ratio) and ascribe 4 of those parts to the largest acute angle we can find the size of that angle by multiplying (90 / 5) x 4 = (18) x 4 = 72. Therefore the largest acute angle is 72 degrees and the smaller acute angle is 18 degrees for a total of 90 degrees. Answer: 72 degrees
An acute angle has one angle.
This is an acute angle.