The order of degrees when measuring angles is as follows: 0 degrees, 90 degrees, 180 degrees, 270 degrees, and 360 degrees.
The degrees go in order from coldest to hottest when measuring temperature. The scale typically starts at absolute zero, then goes up through negative numbers, zero, and then positive numbers.
Meridians are lines on a sphere (or other geometric solid) all of which go through the poles. Degrees are a unit of measurement of angles and temperature and concentration, and some other things. As a unit for measuring angles, meridians are measured in degrees. There are 360 degrees in a complete circle.
0 degrees is the starting point for measuring angles in a Cartesian coordinate system. It represents the direction along the positive x-axis.
yes.
Sum of interior angles = (p-2)*180 degrees Sum of exterior angles = 360 degrees You can go further than that only if the polygon is regular. In that case, all the interior angles are equal and each one is (p-2)*180/p degrees; and all the exterior angles are equal and each is 360/p degrees.
This cannot be done as all angles in a triangle must add up to 180 degrees. A right angle is 90 degrees and so three right angles would equal 270 degrees meaning the lines could not meet up. This is also the same for making a triangle out of two right angles as the angles would add up to 180 degrees without the final line meaning it would have to go past 180 degrees
3There are 3 angles in a triangle. All 3 angles must add up to 180 degrees. For more help go on Wikipedia and type in triangles
The sum of the interior angles of an n-gon is (n-2)*180 degrees. So, for a 40-gon, the sum of the interior angles would be 38*180 = 6840 degrees. If the 40-gon was not regular that is as far as you could go. But if it was a regular n-gon, then all its interior angles are equal, and each would be of 6840/40 = 171 degrees.
Angles only go up to 360 degrees unless it's 1 and 1/36 of a revolution
Any value in the range (0, 360) degrees except 180 degrees. The only requirement is that the sum of all the interior angles is 720 degrees.
YES!!!! However, it is usually designated as 180 degrees. Remember two right angles = 90 degrees + 90 degrees = 180 degrees. This is good for all triangles in the 2-dimensional plane. For triangles in a 3-dimensional volume, e.g. the Meridians and Equator of the Earth(A sphere), their sum of the interior angles may go to 359 degrees.
You cannot. The sum of all four interior angles is 360 degrees. If two are known and two unknown, then you can work out what the two unknown angles should sum to. But that is as far as you can go. There is no way to determine what either of them is.