360 degrees is one full turn- a complete circle.
It is one whole turn.
36
Since a complete circle is 360 degrees, a 30-degree part of a circle is 30/360, or 1/12, of the pie.
To find negative coterminal angles, subtract 360 degrees from the given angles. For 25 degrees, the negative coterminal angle is (25 - 360 = -335) degrees. For 150 degrees, it is (150 - 360 = -210) degrees. For 300 degrees, the negative coterminal angle is (300 - 360 = -60) degrees.
240 degrees.
A complete turn would equal 360 degrees.
If you mean 3/4 then 3/4 of 360 degrees is a turn of 270 degrees
(25/360 turn) x (360 degrees per turn) = 25 degrees
1/360 There are 360 degrees in a full turn
An angle is measured in degrees, which is a unit of angular measurement equal to 1/360 of a full rotation. This means that a full turn is equivalent to 360 degrees. As a fraction of a full turn, an angle can be represented as a numerator over 360, where the numerator is the number of degrees the angle measures. For example, a right angle measures 90 degrees, which can be expressed as 90/360 or 1/4 of a full turn.
It is 100%.
It is: 90/360 = 1/4 of a turn of 360 degrees
It is 24/360 of a turn. The ratio can be simplified, if required.
It is 100/360 of a turn. The ratio can be simplified, if required.
It is 45/360, which can be simplified, if required.
It is one whole turn.
It is 1/4 of a turn of 360 degrees