A side, one adjacent angle and the opposite angle given (AAS)
In geometry, adjacent angles, often shortened as adj.
In geometry, two angles are adjacent angles if they share a common vertex and side, but have no common interior points.
The first is the strongest, and passes from the lateral surface of the first cuneiform to the adjacent angle of the second metatarsal.
The second connects the third cuneiform with the adjacent angle of the second metatarsal.
Angles that share a common vertex and edge but do not share any interior points are called adjacent angles.
Also, triangles with two equal sides and an adjacent angle are not necessarily equal or congruent.
The watari-yagura-mon was constructed at adjacent angles to each side within the gate.
However a watari-yagura-mon is built to an adjacent left angle within the kōrai-mon, of which it has two.
Also, each pair of adjacent angles forms a straight line and the two angles are supplementary.