224k views
3 votes
If the measure of < A is 52 °, and the measure of < B is 38 °, then < A and < B are ______.

If the measure of < A is 52 °, and the measure of < B is 38 °, then < A and-example-1
User Arsim
by
7.9k points

2 Answers

2 votes

Answer:
\large\boxed{\text{B. Complementary}}

Explanation:

Given information


\angle A=52^\circ


\angle B=38^\circ

Given answer choices


\text{A. Congruent: means that the two angles have equal measurements}


\text{B. Complementary: means that the angles add up to 90}^\circ


\text{C. Supplementary: means that the angles add up to 180}^\circ


\text{D. Vertical: are formed when two lines intersect each other at a point, which }


\text{means the two angles are equal in measurement.}

Eliminate choices A and D


\text{The two angles }\angle A \text{ and }\angle B \text{ are not equal in measurement}


\text{Therefore, they are neither congruent nor vertical}

Add the two angles up


\angle A+\angle B=(52)+(38)=90^\circ

Conclusion


\text{As given in the answer choice, complementary angles add up to 90}^\circ


\text{Therefore, }\angle A \text{ and } \angle B \text{ are }\large\boxed{\text{Complementary}}

Hope this helps!! :)

Please let me know if you have any questions

User Dnns
by
7.7k points
6 votes

The correct answer is option b. complementary.

If the measure of ∠A is 52°, and the measure of ∠B is 38°, then ∠A and ∠B are supplementary.

Supplementary angles are a pair of angles whose measures add up to 180°. In this case, the measures of ∠A and ∠B add up to 52° + 38° = 90°, which is less than 180°. Therefore, ∠A and ∠B are not supplementary.

Congruent angles have the same measure. Since the measures of ∠A and ∠B are not the same, they are not congruent.

Complementary angles are a pair of angles whose measures add up to 90°. In this case, the measures of ∠A and ∠B add up to 52° + 38° = 90°. Therefore, ∠A and ∠B are complementary.

User Krg
by
8.5k points

No related questions found

Welcome to QAmmunity.org, where you can ask questions and receive answers from other members of our community.

9.4m questions

12.2m answers

Categories