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 5 of 5 in this lesson: 13.7.5 Looking back, and ahead to Stage 14

13.7.5 Looking back, and ahead to Stage 14

Look how far one little dot has travelled. Back in 13.2 a moving point drew a line, a moving line swept a surface, a moving surface built a solid. We zoomed back onto the straight pieces — lines, rays, segments — learned to measure and combine length, then met the angle and learned to measure turning. Every move we made on a segment we made again on an angle: compare, add, subtract, and bisect. Today we named two special partnerships — complementary (90°) and supplementary (180°) — and pointed an angle at the world with bearings.

So far our angles have been built by hand. Next, in Stage 14, we let geometry build them for us: cross two straight lines and four angles spring up at once. Two of them face each other (vertical angles); each sits next to a partner that completes a straight line (adjacent supplementary angles). The equal-supplements rule you proved in 13.7.3 will tell us, in one breath, that vertical angles are equal. The partnerships you named today are the gears of everything that follows.

eastmath.com · 13.7 Complementary Angles, Supplementary Angles, and Bearings · 13.7.5 Looking back, and ahead to Stage 14