SAT MathGeometry & Trigonometry10 Questions~13 min

SAT Angles in Degrees Questions — Practice with Answers

Practice SAT-style Angles in Degrees questions from the Geometry & Trigonometry section of the SAT Math module. Every question includes a detailed explanation — select an answer, check it immediately, and understand exactly why the correct answer is right.

10
Questions
13m
Est. Time
All
With Explanations
5E/3M/2H
Difficulty Mix
Take the Full Angles in Degrees Practice Test →

What These SAT Angles in Degrees Questions Cover

Topic Focus

Angles in Degrees — a key area of the Geometry & Trigonometry section on the SAT.

Difficulty Range

5 Easy, 3 Medium, and 2 Hard questions — matching the real SAT distribution.

Instant Explanations

Every question includes a step-by-step explanation so you learn from every answer.

SAT Angles in Degrees Practice Questions

10 Questions
0 / 10 answered
1Easy

How many degrees in a right angle?

2Easy

π radians equals how many degrees?

3Easy

One full rotation in degrees?

4Easy

45° in radians is:

5Easy

30° in radians is:

6Medium

Convert 120° to radians:

7Medium

5π/6 radians to degrees:

8Medium

Complement of 32° is:

9Hard

Two angles are supplementary and one is 3 times the other. Smaller angle?

10Hard

A wheel rotates 540°. How many full revolutions?

How to Master SAT Angles in Degrees

Understand the question type, not just the content

Every Angles in Degrees question on the SAT follows predictable patterns. Once you recognize the pattern, you can apply a systematic approach — even on questions you haven't seen before.

Always use process of elimination first

On the SAT, there are three definitively wrong answers and one correct one. Training yourself to find the wrong answers often leads you to the right one more reliably than looking for what 'sounds right'.

Review every explanation, even when correct

Understanding why an answer is right is as important as getting it right. Many Angles in Degrees questions have tricky wrong answers that students sometimes pick for the wrong reasons — even when they get it right.

Practice under time pressure once you understand the content

After you've learned the Angles in Degrees concepts, set a timer. Each SAT Math question should take roughly 1.2–1.5 minutes. Build speed after accuracy — never before.

Take the Full Angles in Degrees Practice Test

Ready for a complete practice test? Get all Angles in Degrees questions in one timed session — with a full score breakdown at the end.

Common Mistakes on SAT Angles in Degrees Questions

Not reading the full question

SAT Angles in Degrees questions are precisely worded. Missing a single word like "NOT" or "EXCEPT" can flip the entire question. Re-read every question after selecting your answer.

Answering from memory instead of the text

Don't try to use calculator shortcuts before understanding what the question is actually asking. Many Math errors come from solving the wrong equation.

Rushing past the explanation

Students who skip reviewing explanations after correct answers miss the second layer of learning. Understanding why each wrong answer is wrong is what separates 700-scorers from 800-scorers.

Giving up on hard questions too fast

Hard Angles in Degrees questions are hard by design — they're meant to take more time. A systematic approach (eliminate 2 wrong answers, then compare the remaining 2) works even when you're unsure.

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