What is an angle?
An angle is the figure formed by two rays sharing a common endpoint, called the vertex. We measure how "open" an angle is in degrees — a full rotation is $360°$.
The four classes
| Type | Range | | --- | --- | | Acute | $0° < \theta < 90°$ | | Right | $\theta = 90°$ | | Obtuse | $90° < \theta < 180°$ | | Straight | $\theta = 180°$ |
Naming convention
We name an angle either by its vertex letter alone (∠B) or with three letters where the middle letter is the vertex (∠ABC — vertex at B).
Mnemonic: "Middle = vertex." If the middle letter changes, the angle changes.
Worked example
If two angles share a side and together form a straight line, they are supplementary: $\alpha + \beta = 180°$.
Given $\alpha = 47°$, find $\beta$:
$$\beta = 180° - 47° = 133°$$
Common trap
Students often confuse supplementary (sum to $180°$) with complementary (sum to $90°$). The letter "S" of "Straight" matches "Supplementary" — both are $180°$.