Stage 13 · First Steps in Geometry

13.6  Comparing Angles, Sums and Differences, and Angle Bisectors

Everything you did with segments — compare, add, subtract, cut in half — you now do with angles.

Ages 11–14 · Intuition before notation
Knowledge point page

Point 2 of 5 in this lesson: 13.6.2 Adding and subtracting angles

13.6.2 Adding and subtracting angles

Put two angles next to each other so they share a side and a vertex, and their measures simply add. If a ray OB lies inside ∠AOC, it cuts that angle into two adjacent pieces, and the whole is the sum of its parts:

∠AOC = ∠AOB + ∠BOC

Read backward, that same picture gives subtraction. If you know the whole and one piece, the other piece is the difference: ∠AOB = ∠AOC∠BOC. This is exactly the segment rule AC = AB + BC from 13.4, with "opening" in place of "length."

Try it Build ∠AOC out of two pieces
Set the two openings with the steppers. Ray OB sits between OA and OC, so the parts add to the whole.
∠AOB = α 40°
∠BOC = β 30°
Example

A door swings open 35°, then you push it another 20°. From its closed position it has now turned 35° + 20° = 55°. If instead the door stands open at 55° and you know the second push was 20°, the first push was 55° − 20° = 35°.

eastmath.com · 13.6 Comparing Angles, Sums and Differences, and Angle Bisectors · 13.6.2 Adding and subtracting angles