360 degrees. Is this from Current Science? That's what I'm doing.
Chat with our AI personalities
No. There are 5 types of angles: Acute, Obtuse, Straight, Reflex, and Round (or perigon). Acute is any angle below 90 degrees. Obtuse is any angle above 90, but below 180. Straight is any angle that reaches 180 degrees exactly (a straight line). Reflex is any angle above 180 degrees, but below 360 degrees. Round (perigon) is an angle where, from the starting points comes arount to a full revolution. So, a 61 degree angle is below 90 degrees, therefore it is acute.
The supplement of an angle is the angle that, when added to the original angle, equals 180 degrees. The complement of an angle is the angle that, when added to the original angle, equals 90 degrees. Therefore, the supplement of the complement of a 38-degree angle would be the angle that, when added to the complement of 38 degrees (52 degrees), equals 180 degrees. This angle would be 128 degrees.
The reference angle for an angle with the measure of 175 degrees is 5 degrees
30 degrees
If it is a complementary angle, the missing angle is 52 degrees. If it is a supplementary angle, the missing angle is 142 degrees. If it is an opposite angle, the missing angle is 38 degrees. Obviously, you need to know what type of angle you're looking for.