A remote interior angle is an angle that does not share a vertex with a given exterior angle. These angles are the “distant” angles from the side of a triangle, which are formed by extending one of its sides. In a triangle, each exterior angle has two. Remote interior angles are pairs of interior angles that are not adjacent to a given angle, such as those in a triangle with angles A, B, and C.
In mathematics, remote interior angles refer to the pair of angles inside a triangle but not adjacent or next to each other. They are formed by one side of the triangle. For regular polygons, the formula to find the exterior angle of a polygon is:
Remote interior angles are those that don’t share a vertex or corner of a triangle with the exterior angle. The measure of the exterior angle equals the sum of the two non-adjacent interior angles of a triangle.
In the example provided, angle d is an exterior angle, and ∠ is an interior angle. Remote interior angles are the two interior angles of a triangle that are not adjacent to the indicated exterior angle.
📹 Remote interior angles for the win
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