Hi there, I understand cos(75) fine, but this just does not make ANY sense to me? Help please!
Okay, what do you understand "cos(75)" to be? There are a number of different ways of "defining" or "visualizing" cosine. Which are you using?
MarkFL mentions the "unit circle" definition, in which we measure a distance, t, around the circumference of a unit circle, counterclockwise for positive t, clockwise for negative t, (If t is in radians. Use the central angle if in degrees), starting at (1, 0) and ending at a given point (x, y) on the circle. "cos(t)" is defined to be the x coordinate of that point. Since x will be decreasing whether we go counterclockwise or clockwise, we have cos(-t)= cos(t) for any t.
Another method, a little more closely related to the elementary "right triangle" definitions, is to draw a right triangle with one leg along the x axis, the other perpedicular to the x-axis and the hypotenuse from (0, 0). If t is positive, the vertical leg is upward, if negative, downward. As long as t is between -90 and 90 degrees, the "near leg", along the x-axis, is positive, so cos(t), "near side over hypotenuse", is postive whether t is positive or negative. Again, cos(-t)= cos(t).