Geometry

Types of Angles

Last updated: March 2026 · Beginner
Real-world applications
📐
Carpentry

Measurements, material estimation, cutting calculations

An angle is formed when two rays share a common starting point, called the vertex. Angles are measured in degrees (written with the symbol °\degree), and a full rotation around a point is 360°360\degree. Understanding angle types is the first step in geometry — every cut, bend, and joint you encounter on a job site starts with knowing your angles.

Measuring Angles in Degrees

Think of degrees as slices of a circle. A full circle is 360°360\degree. A half circle (a straight line) is 180°180\degree. A quarter circle (a square corner) is 90°90\degree.

Angles are measured using a protractor, and they are classified by their size.

Types of Angles

Acute Angle

An acute angle measures less than 90°90\degree.

0°<acute angle<90°0\degree < \text{acute angle} < 90\degree

Examples: 30°30\degree, 45°45\degree, 60°60\degree, 89°89\degree

Think of a slightly open door — the angle between the door and the wall is acute.

Right Angle

A right angle measures exactly 90°90\degree.

right angle=90°\text{right angle} = 90\degree

Right angles are marked with a small square symbol at the vertex. They are everywhere in construction — walls meeting floors, corners of rooms, and square cuts on lumber.

Obtuse Angle

An obtuse angle measures more than 90°90\degree but less than 180°180\degree.

90°<obtuse angle<180°90\degree < \text{obtuse angle} < 180\degree

Examples: 100°100\degree, 120°120\degree, 150°150\degree, 179°179\degree

Think of a door opened past the halfway point — the angle between the door and the wall on the hinge side is obtuse.

Straight Angle

A straight angle measures exactly 180°180\degree.

straight angle=180°\text{straight angle} = 180\degree

It looks like a straight line. The two rays point in exactly opposite directions.

Reflex Angle

A reflex angle measures more than 180°180\degree but less than 360°360\degree.

180°<reflex angle<360°180\degree < \text{reflex angle} < 360\degree

Examples: 200°200\degree, 270°270\degree, 350°350\degree

Reflex angles are measured by going “the long way around” from one ray to the other.

Angle Classification Summary

Angle TypeMeasureExample
Acute0°<θ<90°0\degree < \theta < 90\degree45°45\degree
Rightθ=90°\theta = 90\degree90°90\degree
Obtuse90°<θ<180°90\degree < \theta < 180\degree120°120\degree
Straightθ=180°\theta = 180\degree180°180\degree
Reflex180°<θ<360°180\degree < \theta < 360\degree270°270\degree

Common Angle Types

45°Acute90°Right130°Obtuse180°Straight

Complementary Angles

Two angles are complementary when their measures add up to 90°90\degree.

angle A+angle B=90°\text{angle } A + \text{angle } B = 90\degree

Example 1: Find the complement of 35°35\degree

90°35°=55°90\degree - 35\degree = 55\degree

Answer: The complement of 35°35\degree is 55°55\degree. Together, 35°+55°=90°35\degree + 55\degree = 90\degree.

Example 2: Two angles are complementary. One measures 22°22\degree. Find the other.

90°22°=68°90\degree - 22\degree = 68\degree

Answer: The other angle is 68°68\degree.

Key fact: Both complementary angles must be acute (less than 90°90\degree), because if either one were 90°90\degree or more, the pair could never sum to exactly 90°90\degree.

Supplementary Angles

Two angles are supplementary when their measures add up to 180°180\degree.

angle A+angle B=180°\text{angle } A + \text{angle } B = 180\degree

Example 3: Find the supplement of 110°110\degree

180°110°=70°180\degree - 110\degree = 70\degree

Answer: The supplement of 110°110\degree is 70°70\degree. Together, 110°+70°=180°110\degree + 70\degree = 180\degree.

Supplementary angles often appear along a straight line. If a straight line is split by a ray, the two angles on either side are supplementary.

Real-World Application: Carpentry — Miter Cuts

When a carpenter builds a picture frame or installs crown molding, they join two pieces of wood at a corner. A standard corner is 90°90\degree, and the carpenter needs to cut each piece at the correct angle so the two pieces meet flush.

Problem: You need two pieces of baseboard to meet at a 90°90\degree corner. What angle should each miter cut be?

Step 1: The total corner angle is 90°90\degree.

Step 2: A miter joint splits the corner angle equally between the two pieces:

90°2=45°\frac{90\degree}{2} = 45\degree

Step 3: Set your miter saw to 45°45\degree and cut each board.

Answer: Each board gets a 45°45\degree cut. The two 45°45\degree cuts meet to form the 90°90\degree corner.

This same logic applies to other angles. For a 120°120\degree corner (common in hexagonal frames), each miter cut would be:

120°2=60°\frac{120\degree}{2} = 60\degree

Getting the angle wrong by even a degree or two creates visible gaps in the joint — this is why understanding angles matters in finish carpentry.

Practice Problems

Test your understanding with these problems. Click to reveal each answer.

Problem 1: Classify the angle 142°142\degree.

142°142\degree is greater than 90°90\degree and less than 180°180\degree.

Answer: Obtuse angle

Problem 2: Find the complement of 53°53\degree.

90°53°=37°90\degree - 53\degree = 37\degree

Answer: 37°37\degree

Problem 3: Find the supplement of 75°75\degree.

180°75°=105°180\degree - 75\degree = 105\degree

Answer: 105°105\degree

Problem 4: Two supplementary angles are in the ratio 2:32:3. Find both angles.

Let the angles be 2x2x and 3x3x.

2x+3x=180°2x + 3x = 180\degree

5x=180°5x = 180\degree

x=36°x = 36\degree

The angles are 2(36)=72°2(36) = 72\degree and 3(36)=108°3(36) = 108\degree.

Check: 72°+108°=180°72\degree + 108\degree = 180\degree . Correct.

Answer: 72°72\degree and 108°108\degree

Problem 5: A carpenter needs two pieces of trim to meet at a 135°135\degree corner. What miter angle should each piece be cut at?

135°2=67.5°\frac{135\degree}{2} = 67.5\degree

Answer: Each piece should be cut at 67.5°67.5\degree.

Key Takeaways

  • Angles are measured in degrees, with a full rotation being 360°360\degree
  • The five angle types are acute (<90°<90\degree), right (=90°=90\degree), obtuse (>90°>90\degree), straight (=180°=180\degree), and reflex (>180°>180\degree)
  • Complementary angles add to 90°90\degree; supplementary angles add to 180°180\degree
  • Miter cuts split a corner angle in half — a 90°90\degree corner needs two 45°45\degree cuts
  • Right angles are the most common angle in construction, but knowing all angle types is essential for accurate work

Return to Geometry for more topics in this section.

Last updated: March 28, 2026