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 3 of 5 in this lesson: 13.7.3 The equal-complements property

13.7.3 The equal-complements property

Here is a small fact that looks obvious but turns out to be a workhorse. Suppose two different angles, ∠1 and ∠2, are both complements of the same angle ∠α. What can we say about ∠1 and ∠2?

∠1 + ∠α = 90°   so   ∠1 = 90° − ∠α
∠2 + ∠α = 90°   so   ∠2 = 90° − ∠α
∴ ∠1 = ∠2

Both equal the same quantity, 90° − ∠α, so they equal each other. In words:

Key idea — equal complements (and equal supplements)

If two angles are complements of the same angle (or of equal angles), then the two angles are equal. The same reasoning works for supplements: supplements of the same angle are equal.

∠1 and ∠2 each complete the same angle ∠α to a right angle. Each must be 90° − ∠α, so ∠1 = ∠2 — even though they sit in different corners.
Why it matters

This is the engine behind many proofs you will meet next stage. When two lines cross, the matching angles turn out to be supplements of the same angle — so they are equal. That single line of reasoning is how we will prove the famous vertical-angle fact in Stage 14. Lock the idea in now: equal complements (or supplements) are equal angles.

eastmath.com · 13.7 Complementary Angles, Supplementary Angles, and Bearings · 13.7.3 The equal-complements property