TL;DR There does not seem to be a reason or need to merge these tags with angular at this time. There are often good reasons to have different tags for different versions. As long as it is clear that a significant number of questions pertain specifically to one version, as opposed to any other, there should be a tag specific to that version.
Some Background
We often do use version numbers for certain technologies, especially when the differences involve major (especially breaking) changes. For example, you wrote:
We do not add the version number to other tags like [python2] and [python3], usually we just call it [python], same thing with almost everything else.
This is not really accurate. While we use python (~1.0 MM questions), we also use python-3.x (~117k questions), python-2.7 (~85k questions) and a number of other, version-specific tags for Python. Why? Because Python 2.x and 3.x are very different animals, much like Angular and AngularJS.
The Angular Tags
The short description for the angular5 tag reads:
Questions about Angular version 5, the web framework from Google. Use this tag for Angular questions which are specific to only version 5. Use tag Angular for any Angular questions which are not specific to an individual version.
(emphasis added). The angular6 tag is similar:
Questions about Angular version 6, the web framework from Google. Use this tag for Angular questions which are specific to only version 6. Use tag Angular for any Angular questions which are not specific to an individual version.
From time to time, people are going to have questions that pertain only to version 5 or only to version 6. In that case, they should use one of these tags. And, for that matter, those tags should continue to exist unless and until the community determines that essentially none of the 5,867 questions tagged angular5 and essentially none of the 2,484 questions tagged angular6 are truly version-specific.
When Tag Burnination Is Appropriate
There are two canonical posts relevant to your question:
As the first of these posts explains,
Criteria for Burnination
There are four criteria to consider for burnination:
- Does it describe the contents of the questions to which it is applied? and is it unambiguous?
- Is the concept described even on-topic for the site?
- Does the tag add any meaningful information to the post?
- Does it mean the same thing in all common contexts?
[ . . . ]
A tag must fail all of these tests in order to be considered for burnination. If it is clear that removing the tag will do more harm than good, then we should obviously not remove it.
The angular5 and angular6 tags, as far as I can tell, do not fail any of those criteria, much less all of them.
Conclusion
I don't think you've really demonstrated that these tags are candidates for burnination using the established criteria. Unless and until the community determines - separately for each of the tags at issue - that the tags satisfy the burnination criteria, they should be left alone. Removing them without a thorough review of the affected questions would result in information loss and therefore be destructive to the site.