Missing Angle of a Triangle Lesson

Created by Editorial Team
The ProProfs editorial team is comprised of experienced subject matter experts. They've collectively created over 10,000 quizzes and lessons, serving over 100 million users. Our team includes in-house content moderators and subject matter experts, as well as a global network of rigorously trained contributors. All adhere to our comprehensive editorial guidelines, ensuring the delivery of high-quality content.
Learn about Our Editorial Process

Lesson Overview

Imagine you're building a triangular tent, but one side droops. You measured two of the angles, but something feels off. Without knowing the third angle, your structure collapses. That's the real-world power of geometry.

In this lesson, we'll uncover how to find the missing angle of a triangle, sharpening the geometric thinking you'll need in school, architecture, or even game design. Let's make sure no triangle-real or on paper-is ever incomplete again.

What Is a Triangle?

A triangle is a closed shape with three sides and three angles.

FeatureDescription
Sides3
Angles3
Interior SumAlways 180 degrees

Angle Sum Property of a Triangle

Rule: The sum of all three interior angles in any triangle is always 180°.

Angle A+Angle B+Angle C=180∘\text{Angle A} + \text{Angle B} + \text{Angle C} = 180^\circAngle A+Angle B+Angle C=180∘

This rule helps us calculate a missing angle when two are known.

Take This Quiz:

Types of Triangles and Angle Relationships

Type of TriangleDescriptionAngle Properties
EquilateralAll sides and angles are equalEach angle is 60°
IsoscelesTwo sides and two angles are equalBase angles are equal
ScaleneAll sides and angles are differentNo angle is repeated
Right-angledHas one 90° angleRemaining two angles = 90°

Knowing the type helps you predict or verify angle values.

Steps to Calculate a Missing Angle

  1. Identify the known angles.
  2. Add the known angles together.
  3. Subtract the sum from 180°.

Formula:

Missing angle=180∘−(Angle 1+Angle 2)\text{Missing angle} = 180^\circ - (\text{Angle 1} + \text{Angle 2})Missing angle=180∘−(Angle 1+Angle 2)

Worked Examples Based on Quiz Concepts

Let's break down similar cases found in the quiz.

Example 1: Triangle with angles 34° and 120°

Page 2 of the quiz shows this diagram.

Step-by-step:
34° + 120° = 154°
180° − 154° = 26°

Missing angle = 26°

Example 2: Right triangle with one 43° angle

Another question shows a right triangle with 90° and 43°.

Step-by-step:
90° + 43° = 133°
180° − 133° = 47°

Missing angle = 47°

Example 3: Given angle is 40.5°, others missing (partial data)

If another angle is known, apply the same rule:
180° − (40.5° + another angle) = missing angle

Example 4: One angle in a right triangle is 70°

Right triangle always includes 90°.

90° + 70° = 160°
180° − 160° = 20°

Third angle = 20°

Example 5: Two missing angles in a triangle

Given: One angle = 125°, one = 65° (from Page 3 diagram)

Add known angles:
125° + 65° = 190°

Wait! If the angles are external (as shown), convert to internal:

  • External angles = 180° − internal angle
    Let's assume these are external.

So:
a = 180° − 125° = 55°
b = 180° − 65° = 115°

But if internal:
a + b = 180° − given angle

Encourage students to check whether angles are interior or exterior.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

MistakeWhy It's WrongWhat to Do Instead
Adding up to more than 180°Triangles can't have angles > 180°Double-check your addition
Forgetting to subtractSome students just add known anglesAlways subtract from 180°
Confusing exterior and interior anglesMay lead to wrong answersLook at the triangle carefully

Think Like a Mathematician

Can a triangle have two right angles?
No. Two 90° angles already equal 180°, leaving no space for a third angle.

If one angle is 90° and another is 45°, what type of triangle is it?
Right-angled triangle

Critical Thinking Prompt:

You're designing a ramp with triangular support. If you know one angle is 75°, how would you decide the rest to ensure balance?

Encourage students to visualize, sketch, and calculate before choosing.

8. Practice Table

Angle 1Angle 2Missing Angle = 180° − (A1 + A2)
50°60°70°
90°35°55°
45°45°90°
120°30°30°
80°85°15°

Key Takeaway:

To find the missing angle of a triangle, always remember the 180-degree rule. Identify the triangle type to better predict angle relationships, especially in isosceles and right triangles. Use real-life examples to connect geometric logic with practical reasoning. Practice often to master the method, and be careful with diagrams to spot whether angles are internal or external.

Take This Quiz:

Rate this lesson:

Back to Top Back to top
Advertisement
×

Wait!
Here's an interesting quiz for you.

We have other quizzes matching your interest.