Stage 13 · First Steps in Geometry

13.5  Meeting and Measuring Angles

An angle is the opening between two rays — and a protractor tells you how wide.

Ages 11–14 · Intuition before notation
Knowledge point page

Point 3 of 4 in this lesson: 13.5.3 Special angles you should know on sight

13.5.3 Special angles you should know on sight

A few openings come up so often they each earn a name. Sort every angle by where its measure θ falls between 0° and 360°:

The family of named angles — acute, right (marked with a small square), obtuse, straight, and the full turn.
NameMeasure θLooks like
Acute0° < θ < 90°a sharp opening
Rightθ = 90°a square corner ⊾
Obtuse90° < θ < 180°a wide opening
Straightθ = 180°a flat line
Fullθ = 360°one whole turn

The right angle is the anchor of the whole family: exactly a quarter turn, the corner of every sheet of paper, marked not with an arc but with a small square ⊾. Anything below it is acute ("a-cute little angle"); anything between a right angle and a straight line is obtuse. A straight angle is a half-turn — the two sides point in exactly opposite directions and form a straight line — and a full angle brings you all the way home, 360°.

Key idea

The slider in 13.5.2 already announces each of these as you pass it: under 90° it reads acute, exactly 90° it reads right and draws the square, between 90° and 180° it reads obtuse, and at 180° it reads straight. Scroll back and find each one.

eastmath.com · 13.5 Meeting and Measuring Angles · 13.5.3 Special angles you should know on sight