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Angle Relationships

Complementary, Supplementary, and Vertical Angles

In geometry, when lines intersect or angles are grouped together, they often form special relationships. Understanding these relationships allows us to find unknown angle measures easily.

Complementary Angles

Complementary angles are two angles whose measures add up to exactly 9090^\circ. When placed adjacent to each other, they form a right angle.

  • Example: If one angle is 4040^\circ, its complement is 9040=5090^\circ - 40^\circ = 50^\circ.

Supplementary Angles

Supplementary angles are two angles whose measures add up to exactly 180180^\circ. When placed adjacent to each other, they form a straight line (also known as a straight angle).

Example Problem: Two supplementary angles are given as xx and 2x+302x + 30. Find xx.

Since they are supplementary, their sum must be 180180^\circ. We can write and solve an equation:

x+(2x+30)=180x + (2x + 30) = 180

Combine like terms:

3x+30=1803x + 30 = 180

Subtract 3030 from both sides:

3x=1503x = 150

Divide by 33:

x=50x = 50

Vertical Angles

Vertical angles are the opposite angles formed by the intersection of two lines. A key property of vertical angles is that they are always equal to each other.

Example Problem: Two vertical angles are given as 3x3x and x+40x + 40. Find xx.

Since vertical angles are equal, we set their expressions equal to each other:

3x=x+403x = x + 40

Subtract xx from both sides:

2x=402x = 40

Divide by 22:

x=20x = 20

Summary

  • Complementary Angles: Two angles that add to 9090^\circ.
  • Supplementary Angles: Two angles that add to 180180^\circ.
  • Vertical Angles: Opposite angles at an intersection that are always equal.