8
Yes.
No. All linear pair angles are supplementary, but supplementary angles do not have to be a linear pair.
All supplementary angles do not form a linear pair. The opposite angles of any quadrilateral inscribed in a circle (a cyclic quadrilateral) are supplementary but they are not a linear pair. However, all linear pair are supplementary.
The linear pair conjecture states that if two angles form a linear pair, the sum of the angles is 180 degrees.
Each base pair in DNA is connected by two hydrogen bonds.
Actually, it's the Linear Pair Postulate, which is... If two angles form a linear pair, then they are supplementary; that is, the sum of their measures is 180 degrees.
It is a linear molecule, carbon atom forms two double bonds at an angle of 180o O=C=O
The electron-pair geometry of CS2 is linear because the Lewis structure is S=C=S. Double bonds act as one electron pair to help determine electron-pair geometries of molecules according to VESPR theory
No, angles that form a linear pair are supplementary.
no
no, not exactly.
you bet it can