Supplementary angles are angles which add to 180o. So, one angle is nine times as large as the other, therefore letting the smaller angle be X, we have the following: 9X + X = 180 10X = 180 X=18o and the other is 9 times this amount or 162o
complementary angles measures add to 90 and supplementary angles measures add to 180. Whether they are next to each other or not does not matter.
supplementary angles are equal to 180 degrees. so two congruent(same) angles would be 90 degrees!
No, complementary angles need to ADD and EQUAL 90 degrees. Supplementary angles need to ADD/EQUAL 180 degrees. They do not necessarily need to be adjacent to each other, they only have to add up... Complementary = 90, Supplementary = 180
Are opposite angles. There is nothing in the question that would require them to be equal or supplementary or anything.
When 2 or more angles add up to 180 degrees they are said to be supplementary. Supplementary angles only occur on straight lines, so if one angle is said to be 120 the other angle has to be 60 degrees in order to form a straight line and also to add the angles to 180 degrees
180 - 35 = 145. Half of 145 is 72.5 which is the smaller angle. (The other angle is 35 + 72.5 ie 107.5)
A+b=180 x+2x=180 3x=180 x=60
complementary angles measures add to 90 and supplementary angles measures add to 180. Whether they are next to each other or not does not matter.
supplementary angles are equal to 180 degrees. so two congruent(same) angles would be 90 degrees!
No, complementary angles need to ADD and EQUAL 90 degrees. Supplementary angles need to ADD/EQUAL 180 degrees. They do not necessarily need to be adjacent to each other, they only have to add up... Complementary = 90, Supplementary = 180
The sum of 2 supplementary angles is 180o. If one is 30o, the other is 150o - 30o = 150o.
Supplementary angles are two angles whose measures add to 180 degrees. Adjacent angles are two angles that happen to lie next to each other, so that they combine to form a larger angle whose measure is the sum of the measures of the adjacent angles. Angles may be both adjacent and supplementary, in which case they will form a straight angle.
Wouldn't think so, think of a trapezium shaped like a square with a triangle on one side... The angles at one end of the figure are both 90o, and the angles at the other end will be supplementary, but not opposite angles.
Are opposite angles. There is nothing in the question that would require them to be equal or supplementary or anything.
No, these are two quite different things. "Supplementary" means that the sum of the angles is 180 degrees. The angles need not be consecutive; on the other hand, two consecutive angles can have any measure, not always 180 degrees.No, these are two quite different things. "Supplementary" means that the sum of the angles is 180 degrees. The angles need not be consecutive; on the other hand, two consecutive angles can have any measure, not always 180 degrees.No, these are two quite different things. "Supplementary" means that the sum of the angles is 180 degrees. The angles need not be consecutive; on the other hand, two consecutive angles can have any measure, not always 180 degrees.No, these are two quite different things. "Supplementary" means that the sum of the angles is 180 degrees. The angles need not be consecutive; on the other hand, two consecutive angles can have any measure, not always 180 degrees.
x+3x+40=1804x=140x=3535, 145
When two angles add up to 180 degrees, they are supplementary to each other.