Well, if one angle is acute then the other one has to be acute. This is because the definition of complimentary angles is the sum sum of the angles has to add up to 90 degrees. So therefore, the angle has to add up to 90 degrees.
The sum has to add up to 90 deegrees. If I split a right angle in half, one side should be 60 or 45 and the other 30 or 45. Just an example.
Example 1: There are two main ways this can happen. It depends on whether the two goods are complimentary goods or substitute goods.For example, Hot Dogs and Ketchup are complimentary goods (because they go together) so when the demand for hot dogs goes up, so does the demand for ketchupExample 2. Cars and trucks are substitute goods because, even though they are in the same market, people tend to only buy one or the other. So if the demand for trucks went up, this would mean the demand for cars is going down.If you don't like this I can give the answer to this Multiple Choice Questions like it has on the Shifts of the Demand Curve Worksheet.1. When the goods are bought together, increased demand for one will decrease for the other2. If the goods are used together, increased demand for one will increase demand for the other (This is the correct answer)3. If the goods are substitutes for each other, increased demand for one will increase the demand for the other.4. A drop in price for the good will increase demand for the good and it's substitute.
Under the Lean Thinking angle of view, Quality and Productivity are the 2 sides of the same medal. They go hand-in-hand. They are allied, not enemies. They are not antithetic.The lean philosophy targets at maximising both Quality and Productivity because it targets at maximising Value: Quality and Productivity are the 2 most essential ingredients of Value.Under the Lean philosophy, improving the one at the expenses of the other would be "handicapped".
They attract each other
Then the house needs to be sold.
The question appears to relate to the angles of a triangle. 1) If angle 3 is acute then the other two angles can also be acute. In the case of an equilateral triangle all three angles are equal and acute. 2) If angle 3 is acute and one other angle is obtuse then the remaining angle is acute. 3) If angle 3 is acute and one other angle is a right angle then the remaining angle is acute.
Yes providing that one angle is a right angle and the other two angles are acute angles
No. In fact, if one of the angles is not acute (a right angle or obtuse), the other two must be acute.
If all three angles of a triangle measure less that 90 degrees (if all three angles are acute), the triangle is an acute triangle. A triangle that has a right angle (an angle the measures exactly 90 degrees) is a right triangle. (The other 2 angles will be acute angles.) A triangle that has an angle that is greater than 90 degrees (an obtuse angle), is an obtuse triangle. (The other 2 angles will be acute angles.)
Yes. A triangle can have only one obtuse angle. The other two angles will always be acute.
That depends on the sizes of the other 2 angles if it's a right angle triangle then the other acute angle would be 70 degrees.
Just the one and the other two angles are acute angles
The other angles are 145°, 35°, and 145°.
The other two angles would be acute angles
A right angle has a 90-degree and in two acute angles.
A triangle is a three-sided figure with three angles, two or three of which (depending on the triangle) must be acute angles. The sum of all of the angles has to equal 180° - no more, no less. An acute angle is an angle of less than 90°. If one of the angles of a triangle is 90° or more (it is a right angle or obtuse angle) the SUM of the other two angles cannot exceed 180° minus the degree of the first angle. Therefore the two remaining angles must be less than the first angle, which means that they have to be acute angles.
One angle must be an obtuse angle and the other two angles must be acute angles