Stage 13 · First Steps in Geometry

13.7  Complementary Angles, Supplementary Angles, and Bearings

Two angles that finish a right angle, two that finish a straight line — and how to point with angles.

Ages 11–14 · Intuition before notation
Knowledge point page

Point 1 of 5 in this lesson: 13.7.1 Complementary angles (sum 90°)

13.7.1 Complementary angles (sum 90°)

Picture a square corner — the right angle you met in 13.5, marked with a small square. Now slice that corner with a single ray. You have split one 90° angle into two smaller angles, and no matter where the cut falls, those two pieces must add back up to the whole corner.

Two angles whose measures add to 90° are called complementary angles. Each one is called the complement of the other. So if ∠1 measures 35°, its complement measures 90° − 35° = 55°; together they rebuild the right angle.

A right angle cut into ∠1 = 35° and ∠2 = 55°. Because 35° + 55° = 90°, the two angles are complementary.
Key idea

Complementary ⇒ the two angles add to 90°. To find one angle's complement, subtract from 90: complement of θ = 90° − θ. (Only angles smaller than 90° have a complement.)

Try it Drag ∠1 — watch its complement appear

In this mode the two angles always fill a right angle. As ∠1 grows, ∠2 = 90 − ∠1 shrinks to match.

Pair type
∠1

Try setting the slider to exactly 45°. Then ∠2 = 90 − 45 = 45° too — an angle that is its own complement. There is exactly one such angle.

eastmath.com · 13.7 Complementary Angles, Supplementary Angles, and Bearings · 13.7.1 Complementary angles (sum 90°)