8.1 Building Blocks of Geometry Point: an exact location [notation] Line: a straight path with no thickness, extending forever in opposite directions [notation]

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Points, Lines, and Shapes!
Advertisements

Parallels and Polygons By: Carly Salzberg and Courtney Marsh.
Geometry Chapter 1 Review TEST Friday, October 25 Lessons 1.1 – 1.7
Geometry Final Test Ms. Rowles’ Class.
Geometry Terms. Acute Angles Acute Triangle Adjacent Angles Alternate Interior Angles Alternate Exterior Angles Angle Circle Complementary Angles Congruent.
Math Polygons.
Geometry Jeopardy Start Final Jeopardy Question Lines and Polygons Angles and More Naming Polygons TrianglesCircles Quadri- laterals
Definitions and Examples of Geometric Terms
Geometry is everywhere by : Laura González  Solid figures are 3D figures that have length, width and heigth.  For example :  Sphere Faces:0 Vertices:0.
Basic geometric FIGURES
Basic Geometry Vocabulary Review.
G EOMETRY By: Chelsea Ralph. CHAPTER 1 TERMS Conjecture- an unproven statement based on observations Counterexample-shows a conjecture is false Complementary.
TMAT 103 Chapter 2 Review of Geometry. TMAT 103 §2.1 Angles and Lines.
Geometry Vocabulary Chapter 9.
Geometry Vocabulary Test Ms. Ortiz. 1. If two parallel lines are cut by a transversal, then the corresponding angles are congruent.
Tools of Geometry Chapter 1 Vocabulary Mrs. Robinson.
Mathematics Shape Words. line segment ray.
Polygons Two-dimensional shapes that have three or more sides made from straight lines. Examples: triangles squares rectangles.
2 pt 3 pt 4 pt 5pt 1 pt 2 pt 3 pt 4 pt 5 pt 1 pt 2pt 3 pt 4pt 5 pt 1pt 2pt 3 pt 4 pt 5 pt 1 pt 2 pt 3 pt 4pt 5 pt 1pt CIRCLESDEFINITIONSTRIANGLESANGLES.
Click to begin Click to begin Your Name Click here for Final Jeopardy Click here for Final Jeopardy
Chapter 8 Geometry.
1. Definitions 2. Segments and Lines 3. Triangles 4. Polygons and Circles 5. 2D Perimeter/Area and 3D Volume/Surface Area.
11-1: Angle Relationships 4 ways to name angles –Use the vertex as the middle letter, and the point from each side (
Geometry Terms.
Created by: Sharon Moore
. Geometry A POINT A point is an exact location in space.
Geometry 2 nd Semester Vocabulary Review. 1.An arc with a measure greater than 180. Major arc 2.For a given circle, a segment with endpoints that are.
SECTION 9-2 Curves, Polygons, and Circles Slide
Section 9.1 Points, Lines, Planes Point Segment Ray Line Plane Parallel Perpendicular Skew Intersecting Lines.
The mathematical study of the properties, measurements, and relationships of points, lines, planes, surfaces, angles, and solids. Geometry.
Jeopardy Geometry Circles 1 Triangles 2 Polygons 3 Formulas 4 Angles 5 Pot Luck
Jeopardy 8.1 – – – – 8.11 Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Final Jeopardy.
Introduction to congruent angles
Geometry Grade 4 CONFIDENTIAL.
Geometry Angie Bordwell, Vertis Lewis, Lissa Purpura, and Jean Tuquero.
Foundations for Geometry Chapter 1 By: Peter Spencer Maria Viscomi Ian McGreal.
Geometry Let’s do it!!.
Vocabulary for section 2.2 Part II MA418 McAllister Spring 2010.
Period 5 Nathan Rodriguez. -Point  a geometric element that has position but no extension; "a point is defined by its coordinates"
Geometry Vocabulary 7-1 By: Hilary Clinger & Alex Shipherd.
Geometry Vocabulary Introduction to Classifying Angles.
Triangles & Congruency
Plane vs. Solid Geometry Plane GeometrySolid Geometry.
Elements of 2D Figures & Classifying Polygons. Point: a position in a plane or in a space that has no dimensions. Example: a point is written point A.
Basic Geometry Vocabulary Review.
Integrated II – Unit Three Word Bank 1.Complementary Angles Two angles that add to 90 degrees. 2.Supplementary Angles Two angles that add to 180 degrees.
 Conjecture- unproven statement that is based on observations.  Inductive reasoning- looking for patterns and making conjectures is part of this process.
Polygons, Circles, and Angles. Classifying Polygons Polygon—closed figure with at least 3 sides Regular polygon—all sides and angles are congruent.
Geometry. Points Lines Planes A ______ is an exact location in space. point.
Geometry Vocabulary Chapter 8. POINT A POINT is an exact location on a graph, shape or in “space”. The Hershey Kiss is a POINT on the line ●
Chapter 2 Introducing Geometry. Lesson 2.1 Definition – a statement that clarifies or explains the meaning of a word or a phrase. Point – an undefined.
Chapter 9 Notes. 9-1 Intro. To Geometry W T K H n  Name four Points.  Name four different segments.  Write five other names for line n.  Name five.
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 9 Section 1 – Slide 1 AND.
Point – a location, has no size, name point by capital letter Line – series of points that extend in opposite directions without end Ray – part of a line.
2D Computer Project By: Alexander and Alby. obtuse angle right angle 3 types of angles an angle that measure exactly 90 degrees. an angle that measure.
Lines, angles and polygons: Parallel lines and angles Triangles Quadrilaterals Angles in polygons Congruence Similarity.
GEOMETRY!!!. Points  A point is an end of a line segment.  It is an exact location in space.   It is represented by a small dot. Point A A.
Geometric Terms Amanda & Madison. Right Angle! Right Angle- an angel that is 90 degrees.
Do Now  The measure of angle JKL is 120 degrees. Its supplement is 2x+10. What is the value of x?  Angle A and Angle B are complementary angles. The.
plane shape A shape in a plane that is formed by curves, line segments, or both. These are some plane figures 12.1.
Geometry Ms. Crusenberry
Geometry Angles: Acute, Obtuse, Straight, Right
Polygons Essential Question:
Basic Geometry Vocabulary Review.
Go Math Grade 3 Chapter 12 Two-Dimensional Shapes
Plane figure with segments for sides
Classifying Polygons.
Top of book—front of yellow page
Classifying Polygons.
Geometry Vocabulary.
Presentation transcript:

8.1 Building Blocks of Geometry Point: an exact location [notation] Line: a straight path with no thickness, extending forever in opposite directions [notation] Plane: flat surface with no thickness that extends forever along two dimensions [notation] Ray: part of a line. It has an end point, and extends forever in one direction [notation] Line segment: part of a line or a ray. Has two end points. [notation] Vertex: the point where two lines, rays or line segments meet to form an angle. Congruent: figures that have the same shape and size. Congruent line segments have the same length. [notation] Complementary angle pairs are two angles that form a _______________ (think Corner) … Supplementary angle pairs are two angles that form a ______________________ (think Straight)…

8.2 Classifying Angles Angle: two rays with a common end point Vertex: the common endpoint of two rays Right: an angle that measures exactly 90°. The symbol ∟ on the inside of an angle means that it is a right angle. Acute: an angle that measures more than 0° and less than 90°. Obtuse: an angle that measures more than 90° and less than 180°. Straight: an angle that measures exactly 180°. Reflex: an angle that measures more than 180° and less than 360°. Complementary: two angles where the sum of their measurements is 90°. Supplementary: two angles where the sum of their measurements is 180°.

8.3 Line and Angle Relationships Perpendicular: two rays, lines, or line segments that intersect, forming a 90° angle. Parallel lines: lines on the same plane that never intersect. Skew lines: lines on different planes do not intersect and that are not parallel. Adjacent angles: are supplementary angles with a common vertex and a common side but no common interior points. (1,2), (, ) Vertical angles: opposite angles formed by intersecting lines, they have the same measure (are congruent). (2, 3), (, ) Transversal: a line that intersects two or more lines in the same plane

8.3 Line and Angle Relationships Transversals with Parallel Lines Corresponding Angles: are congruent (1,5), (3,7), (, ), (, ) Alternate Interior Angles: are congruent (4, 5), (, ) Alternate Exterior Angles: are congruent (1, 8), (, )

8.4 Properties of Circles Circle: set of points in plain that are all the same distance from a given point (the center of the circle). Arc: part of a circle named by its endpoints. Diameter: line segment that passes through the center of a circle, and whose endpoints lie on the circle. Radius: line segment whose endpoints are the center of the circle and any point on the circle. Chord: line segment whose endpoints are any two points on a circle. Central angle: angle formed by two radii (plural of radius). The sum of all non-overlapping central angles is 360°. Sector: the area of a circle formed by two radii and an arc connecting the radii (think of a slice of pie or pizza).

8.5 Classifying Polygons Polygon: Closed plane; made by three or more line segments that meet at their end points, but do not intersect. Vertex: points where line segments meet Regular: all sides and angles are congruent NameNumber of Sides Triangle3 Quadrilateral4 Pentagon5 Hexagon6 Heptagon7 Octagon 8 Nonagon9 Decagon10

8.6 Classifying Triangles Scalene: no congruent sides of angles Isosceles: at least two congruent sides and angles Equilateral: all the sides and angles are congruent Acute: all of the angles are acute Obtuse: one of the angles is obtuse Right: one angle is a right angle Angles opposite of congruent sides are congruent. Sides opposite of congruent angles are congruent.

8.7 Classifying Quadrilaterals Parallelogram: opposite sides are parallel and congruent. Opposite angles are congruent. Rectangle: Parallelogram with four right angles Rhombus: Parallelogram with four congruent sides, opposite angles are congruent Square: Parallelogram with four congruent sides and four right angles. Trapezoid: Only one pair of opposite sides is parallel.

8.8 Angles in Polygons Triangle Sum Rule: the sum of the measures of the angles in a triangle is 180°. Quadrilateral: If you draw a diagonal from one vertex of a quadrilateral to the opposite vertex, you form two triangles. 180° + 180° = 360°. 1.Draw a pentagon 2.Draw a diagonal from one vertex to a non-adjacent vertex. 3.Start at the original vertex and draw a diagonal to another non- adjacent vertex. How many triangles are there? Formula for degrees in a polygon is: 180 × (n – 2), where n is the number of sides.

8.9 Congruent Figures Congruent: figures with the same size and shape. Triangles are congruent if they pass the: –Side-Side-Side rule –Side-Angle-Side rule –Angle-Side-Angle rule Figures may not look congruent at first– you may have to flip them. For polygons with more than three sides, you need to compare sides and angles. If figures are congruent, you can find missing measurements.

8.9 Congruent Figures Similar: Congruent What about these?

8.10 Translations, Reflections, and Rotations Preimage is the original and is changed to the image Translation (slide): each point of a figure is move the same distance in the same direction. Notation for translation: (x,y) → (x + a, y + b) Moving a figure with coordinate (5,3) to the right 5 units and down 6 units: (5,3) → (5 + 5, 3 + (-6)) → (10, -3) Reflection (flip): the figure is flipped or reflected on a line called the line of reflection to make a mirror image. Rotation (turn or pivot): the figure is rotated around a fixed point (center of rotation). Only one point should stay the same. Point Notation for rotation where a triangle rotates on A: ABC → AB’C’

8.11 Symmetry Line Symmetry: the figure can be divided by a line that creates two sides that are mirror images of each other. The line of reflection or line of symmetry is the location where that mirror image is created. You can fold one part over the other and they are identical. (Flags, faces, rugs,…) Rotational Symmetry: the figure can be turned less than 360 ° to produce an image that fits exactly over the original figure. (sand dollar, snowflake, …) Figures without symmetry are said to have asymmetry or be asymmetrical.