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Identify Coterminal Angles

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|  Updated:  
2016-03-26 10:58:06
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Trigonometry For Dummies
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Two angles are coterminal if they have the same terminal side. You have an infinite number of ways to give an angle measure for a particular terminal ray. Sometimes, using a negative angle rather than a positive angle is more convenient, or the answer to an application may involve more than one revolution (spinning around and around).

Angles can have terminal sides that involve one or more full revolutions around the origin or terminal sides that go clockwise instead of counterclockwise — or both of these situations can happen.

More than one revolution

An angle measuring 70 degrees is coterminal with an angle measuring 430 degrees. The angle measuring 430 degrees is actually 360 + 70 (one full revolution plus the original 70). These two angles are also coterminal with an angle of 790 degrees (360 + 360 + 70 = 790). This pattern could go on and on, with the addition of another 360 degrees each time.

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Negative coterminal angles

An angle of 70 degrees is coterminal with an angle of –290 degrees. Two rotations in the negative (clockwise) direction give you an angle of –650 degrees (–290 – 360 = –650).

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Mary Jane Sterling (Peoria, Illinois) is the author of Algebra I For Dummies, Algebra Workbook For Dummies, Algebra II For Dummies, Algebra II Workbook For Dummies, and many other For Dummies books. She taught at Bradley University in Peoria, Illinois for more than 30 years, teaching algebra, business calculus, geometry, and finite mathematics.