Mathematics

Assertion: Two angles making a linear pair are always supplementary.

Reason: A pair of adjacent angles is said to be a linear pair, if these angles have one arm common and other arms as opposite rays.

  1. Both Assertion (A) and Reason (R) are true and Reason (R) is the correct explanation of Assertion (A).
  2. Both Assertion (A) and Reason (R) are true and Reason (R) is not the correct explanation of Assertion (A).
  3. Assertion (A) is true but Reason (R) is false.
  4. Assertion (A) is false but Reason (R) is true.

Lines & Angles

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Answer

Both Assertion (A) and Reason (R) are true and Reason (R) is the correct explanation of Assertion (A).

Explanation

The assertion states that a linear pair of angles is always supplementary. This is mathematically true. In geometry, supplementary angles are two angles that sum up to exactly 180°.

The reason provides the geometric definition of a linear pair:

They must be adjacent (share a common vertex and a common arm).

Their non-common arms must be opposite rays, which means they form a single straight line.

Since the definition in the Reason is exactly why the Assertion is true, the Reason is the correct explanation for the Assertion.

Hence, option 1 is the correct option.

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