Question
Find the measures of angles 1, 2, and 3.
(Hint: Find mangle∠1, then mangle∠2, and then mangle∠3.)
11
22
33
85 degrees85°
35 degrees35°
40 degrees40°
left parenthesis The figure is not to scale. right parenthesis(The figure is not to scale.)
Question content area bottom
Part 1
The measure of angle 1 is enter your response heredegrees°.
(Simplify your answer. Type an integer or a decimal.)
(Hint: Find mangle∠1, then mangle∠2, and then mangle∠3.)
11
22
33
85 degrees85°
35 degrees35°
40 degrees40°
left parenthesis The figure is not to scale. right parenthesis(The figure is not to scale.)
Question content area bottom
Part 1
The measure of angle 1 is enter your response heredegrees°.
(Simplify your answer. Type an integer or a decimal.)
Answers
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
To find the measures of angles 1, 2, and 3, we would typically need to know how these angles are related to each other and what other angles are involved in the figure provided (even though it is not to scale). Since the specific relationships in the figure are not mentioned, I'll provide a general approach to solve for angles based on typical situations involving angles.
### General Approach:
1. **Identify relationships**: Determine if any angles are complementary (sum to 90 degrees), supplementary (sum to 180 degrees), or any other geometric relationships (e.g., vertical angles, alternate interior angles when dealing with parallel lines).
2. **Solve step-by-step**:
- If you can find one angle, you can sometimes find others based on their relationships to that angle.
### Example Scenario:
Let's assume some common situations:
Assume the angles you are trying to find are related like this:
1. If you have angle 1 and know that angle 1 + angle 2 = 180° (because they are supplementary), then:
- If angle 1 is 85°, then angle 2 = 180° - 85° = 95°.
2. After finding angle 2, you can check if there's a relationship with angle 3:
- If angle 2 and angle 3 are complementary (like they form a right angle), you could do:
- If angle 2 is 95°, then angle 3 = 90° - angle 2.
### Specific Calculation:
Without the specific relationships, I'm unable to compute the exact values of angles 1, 2, and 3. You would substitute the angles into the relationships based on their type.
Please provide the relationships between the angles (like if they're supplementary, complementary, etc.), or the more specific context so that I can provide you with the measures of angles 1, 2, and 3.
### General Approach:
1. **Identify relationships**: Determine if any angles are complementary (sum to 90 degrees), supplementary (sum to 180 degrees), or any other geometric relationships (e.g., vertical angles, alternate interior angles when dealing with parallel lines).
2. **Solve step-by-step**:
- If you can find one angle, you can sometimes find others based on their relationships to that angle.
### Example Scenario:
Let's assume some common situations:
Assume the angles you are trying to find are related like this:
1. If you have angle 1 and know that angle 1 + angle 2 = 180° (because they are supplementary), then:
- If angle 1 is 85°, then angle 2 = 180° - 85° = 95°.
2. After finding angle 2, you can check if there's a relationship with angle 3:
- If angle 2 and angle 3 are complementary (like they form a right angle), you could do:
- If angle 2 is 95°, then angle 3 = 90° - angle 2.
### Specific Calculation:
Without the specific relationships, I'm unable to compute the exact values of angles 1, 2, and 3. You would substitute the angles into the relationships based on their type.
Please provide the relationships between the angles (like if they're supplementary, complementary, etc.), or the more specific context so that I can provide you with the measures of angles 1, 2, and 3.
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