supplement: 30 degrees.
complement: No true answer. -60 degrees I guess. 150 is already > 90
complementary anglesplural of com·ple·men·ta·ry an·gleNoun:Either of two angles whose sum is 90°. def. credit: GoogleChat with our AI personalities
The complement of an angle can be added to that angle to get a total of 90 degrees. Therefore, if your angle was 45*, set up a simple algebra problem. 45+x=90 subtract 45, you get x=45 The complement of a 45* angle is 45*. The complement of a 30* angle is 60, etc. The supplement of an angle can be added to said angle to get a total of 180 degrees, so if your angle is 45*, set up an algebra problem (again :P). 45+x=180 subtract 45, x=135. The supplement of a 45* angle is 135*. The supplement of a 30*angle is 150*, etc. Hope this helped!
30
A pair of supplementary angles adds up to 180 degrees. Therefore, the supplement to a 150 degree angle is 180 - 150 = 30 degrees.
Very simple, let's mount a linear system: x=measure of the angle; y=supplement; z=complement: I:x+y= 180; II:x+z= 90; III: y+z= 150; Summing I with II we have: I+II: 2x+y+z= 270; III: y+z=150 Now, subtracting III from I+II we have a simple equation: 2x=120; >x= 60< So, the angle whose sum of the measures of its complements and supplement is 150, has 60 degrees.
152 degrees. A supplement is an angle that is added on to another angle to make 180 degrees. e.g., "the supplement of 100 would be 80" or "the supplement of 150 would be 30. The two angles will always add up to 180.