About Angles Washington DC

An angle is a measure of rotation. Angles are measured in degrees. One complete rotation is measured as 360°. Angle measure can be positive or negative, depending on the direction of rotation.

Local Companies

Unitas Classical Christian Cooperative
301-464-6344
377 West Central Ave
Davidsonville, MD
The Excel Institute
(202) 387-1550
2851 V Street, NE
Washington, DC
Premier Writing Solutions
(202) 635-2197
3289 Hardin Pl., NE
Washington, DC
DeVry University
703-414-4000
2450 Crystal Dr
Arlington, VA
Berlitz International
(202) 331-1160
1 Thomas Circle
Washington, DC
Multilingual Experts
(202) 393-0766
1010 Vermont Ave., NW
Washington, DC
1010 Vermont Ave., NW
(202) 393-0766
1010 Vermont Ave., NW Suite 506
Washington, DC
Alpha Omega Translations
(703) 768-2535
7674 Audubon Meadow Way
Washington, DC
Art Institute Of Washington The
800-896-9517
1820 North Fort Myer Drive
Arlington, VA
Applied Career Training Inc
703-527-6660
1100 Wilson Blvd
Arlington, VA

An angle is a measure of rotation. Angles are measured in degrees. One complete rotation is measured as 360°. Angle measure can be positive or negative, depending on the direction of rotation. The angle measure is the amount of rotation between the two rays forming the angle. Rotation is measured from the initial side to the terminal side of the angle. Positive angles (Figure 1 a) result from counterclockwise rotation, and negative angles (Figure 1 b) result from clockwise rotation. An angle with its initial side on the x-axis is said to be in standard position.





Figure 1

(a) A positive angle and (b) a negative angle.


Angles that are in standard position are said to be quadrantal if their terminal side coincides with a coordinate axis. Angles in standard position that are not quadrantal fall in one of the four quadrants, as shown in Figure 2 .





Figure 2

Types of angles.


Example 1: The following angles (standard position) terminate in the listed quadrant.

94°

2nd quadrant

500°

2nd quadrant

−100°

3rd quadrant

180°

quadrantal

−300°

1st quadrant

Two angles in standard position that share a common terminal side are said to be coterminal. The angles in Figure 3 are all coterminal with an angle that measures 30°.





Figure 3

Angles coterminal with 30°


All angles that are coterminal with d° can be written as





where n is an integer (positive, negative, or zero).

Example 2: Is an angle measuring 200° coterminal with an angle measuring 940°?

If an angle measuring 940° and an angle measuring 200° were coterminal, then





Because 740 is not a multiple of 360, these angles are not coterminal.

Example 3: Name 5 angles that are coterminal with −70°.





Angle measurements are not always whole numbers. Fractional degree measure can be expressed either as a decimal part of a degree, such as 34.25°, or by using standard divisions of a degree called minutes and seconds. The following relationships exist between degrees, minutes, and seconds:





Example 4: Write 34°15′ using decimal degrees.





Example 5: Write 12°18′44″ using decimal degrees.





Example 6: Write 81.293° using degrees, minutes, and seconds.





Cliffs Notes Online

Featured Local Company

Unitas Classical Christian Cooperative

301-464-6344
377 West Central Ave
Davidsonville, MD

Related Local Events
Human Capital Management Federal (HCMF)
Dates: 11/16/2009 - 11/18/2009
Location: Sheraton National Hotel
Arlington, VA
View Details

ALA - American Library Association Annual Conference and Exhibition
Dates: 1/24/2010 - 1/30/2010
Location: Walter E. Washington Convention Center
Washington, DC
View Details

MIlitary Health Managment
Dates: 1/26/2010 - 1/28/2010
Location: Sheraton National Hotel, Arlington
Arlington, VA
View Details

BookExpo America - Trade Show
Dates: 6/3/2010 - 6/6/2010
Location: Walter E. Washington Convention Center
Washington, DC
View Details

ALA - American Library Association Annual Conference and Exhibition 2010
Dates: 6/24/2010 - 6/30/2010
Location: Walter E. Washington Convention Center
Washington, DC
View Details