Depends on whether you want to use it as a noun or a verb.
Noun Example: "The left rear tire of the truck was tilted at an odd angle."
Verb Example: "The mad scientist angled his laser so it would bounce off the mirror."
Bonus Example: "John Johnson angled for hours, but all his catches got away."
That is an obtuse angle.
A. The angle is smaller than a right angle
The boat had triangular sails.
Yes! Angle is a noun.
There are several cases when you would want to use the law of sines. When you have angle angle side, angle side angle, or angle side side you would use the law of sines.
She wore her hat at a jaunty angle.
The teacher told the class that an acute angle was less that 90 degrees.
The wood formed an acute angle with the wall.
angle greater than 180 degrees
I like the right angle because it is easy to identify.
I have a friend that is barmy for old sewing machines.Pour the beer on an angle or it gets all barmy.
Can you see the problem from my angle. Use a question mark at the end of that sentence. Answers will not let me put one there.
There is no English word "perpend." There is a mathematics word "perpendicular," which means at a right angle, but you may be referring to some other word that you did not spell correctly.
A triangle has one less angle than a square.
A sentence showing the proper use of the word arabesque would be something like this: "Jessica's arabesque was so high it was almost a ninety degree angle."
use it by saying- how can you use the word ebullient in a sentence?
Can you use the word concluding in a sentence? Done.