SOLUTION: When one-half the supplement of an angle is added to the complement of the angle, the sum is 120. What is the measure of the complement?

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Question 498619: When one-half the supplement of an angle is added to the complement of the angle, the sum is 120. What is the measure of the complement?
Answer by bucky(2189) About Me  (Show Source):
You can put this solution on YOUR website!
Let's call the unknown angle A. Then its supplement is 180-A and its complement is 90-A.
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Therefore, 1/2 of the supplement of angle A can be written as (1/2)*(180-A). It gets added to the complement as follows:
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(1/2)*(180-A)+ (90-A)
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and this is to equal 120. So we can write the equation as:
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(1/2)*(180-A)+ (90-A) = 120
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Get rid of the 1/2 by multiplying all terms on both sides by 2 to get:
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180-A + 2(90-A) = 240
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Do the distributed multiplication on the left side:
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180 - A + 180 - 2A = 240
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add 180 + 180 on the left side:
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360 - A - 2A = 240
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combine the A terms:
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360 - 3A = 240
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Subtract 360 from both sides:
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-3A = -120
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Multiply both sides by -1:
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3A = 120
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Solve for the unknown angle by dividing both sides by 3 to get:
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A = 120/3 = 40
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So the unknown angle is 40 degrees. That means that its complement is 90 - 40 = 50 degrees.
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This also means that its supplement is 180 - 40 = 140 degrees. Therefore, a half of its supplement is 70 degrees and when added to the 50 degree complement the total is 120 degrees, just as the problem said it should be. Everything checks.
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In summary, the complement that you were to find is 50 degrees.
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Hope this helps you to understand the problem a little better.
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