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Unit 2 Reasoning & Proof
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Vocabulary Each word needs a page in your log
Definition/Explanation: Ways to Name: Vocabulary Word Relationship: Drawing/Example:
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Point Basic undefined term in geometry Location represented by a dot
The geometric figure formed at the intersection of two distinct lines. Named with italicized capital letter: D, M, P
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Line A B Basic undefined term in geometry
A line is the straight path connecting two points and extending beyond the points in both directions. Made up of points with no thickness or width Named by two points on the line or small italicized letters π΄π΅ means line AB or BA m A B m
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Line Segment All points between two given points (including the given points themselves). Measurable part of the line between two endpoints including all points in between Named by endpoints of segment πΆπ· means Segment CD or Segment DC C and D are the endpoints of the segment C D
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Plane A flat surface with no depth extending in all directions.
Any three noncollinear points lie on one and only one plane. So do any two distinct intersecting lines. A plane is a two-dimensional figure. Named by three non-collinear points or capital script letter ADL, LAD, LDA, DAL, DLA, ALD or P P A D L
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Collinear Complementary Angles Coplanar Supplementary Angles
Points that lie on the same line Complementary Angles Two acute angles that add up to 90Β° Also adjacent form a right angle. Coplanar Points that lie in the same plane Supplementary Angles Two angles that add up to 180Β°
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Ray A part of a line starting at a particular point and extending infinitely in one direction. Named by end point and one other letter πΈπΉ or πΉπΈ E F
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Angle Two rays sharing a common endpoint.
Intersection of two noncollinear rays at common endpoint. Rays are called sides and common endpoint is called a vertex Typically measured in degrees or radians Named by 3 letters--vertex in center position KLM or MLK M L K
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Congruent Exactly equal in size, length, measure and shape.
For any set of congruent geometric figures, corresponding sides, angles, faces, etc. are congruent (CPCTC). Congruent segments, sides, and angles are often marked
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Parallel Lines Two distinct coplanar lines that do not intersect. Parallel lines have the same slope. Named by π΄π΅ πΆπ· B D A C
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Perpendicular Lines At a 90Β° angle.
Perpendicular lines have slopes that are negative reciprocals Named by πΈπΉβπΊπ» G E F H
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Adjacent Angles Two angles in a plane which share a common vertex and a common side but do not overlap and have no common interior points.
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Vertical Angles Nonadjacent angles opposite one another at the intersection of two lines. Vertical angles are congruent. Angle 1 and 3 are congruent vertical angles. Angle 2 and 4 are congruent vertical angles. 1 4 2 3
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Linear Pair A pair of adjacent angles formed by intersecting lines.
Non-common sides are opposite rays Linear pairs of angles are supplementary. Angles 1 and 2, 2 and 3, 3 and 4, 1 and 4 are linear pairs. 1 4 2 3
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Theorem An assertion that can be proved true using the rules of logic.
Is proven from axioms, definitions, undefined terms, postulates, or other theorems already known to be true. A major result that has been proved to be true
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Axiom Postulate Corollary Undefined Terms
A statement accepted as true without proof. So simple and direct that it is unquestionably true. Postulate Statement that describes a fundamental relationship between the basic terms of geometry Accepted as true without proof Corollary Statement that can b easily proven Undefined Terms Readily understood words that are not formally explained by more basic words and concepts Point, line, plane
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Proof Step-by-step explanation that uses definitions, axioms, postulates, and previously proven theorems to draw a conclusion about a geometric statement. Logical argument in which each statement is supported by a statement that is accepted as true. Five Key Elements Given Draw Diagrams Prove Statement Reasons
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Two-Column Proofs Formal Proof
Statements & reasons organized into two columns
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Algebraic Proofs Group of algebraic steps used to solve problems (deductive argument) Uses Properties of Equality for Real Numbers Reflexive Symmetric Transitive Addition & Subtraction Multiplication & Division Substitution Distibutive
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Flow Proofs Organizes a series of statements in logical order, starting with the given statement Statement written in box with reason written below box Arrows indicate how statements are related
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Indirect Proof Uses indirect reasoning
Assume conclusion is false Show that assumption leads to contradiction Since assumption false, conclusion must be true Also called proof by contradiction
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Coordinate Proof Uses figures in the coordinate plane and algebra to prove geometric concepts Placing Figures Use the origin as a vertex or center of the figure Place at least one leg on an axis Keep figure in 1st quadrant if possible Use coordinates to make computations as simple as possible.
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Paragraph Proof Informal Proof
Paragraph written to explain why a conjecture for a given statement is true.
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Theorems and Postulates
Midpoint Theorem If M is the midpoint of π΄π΅ , then π΄π β
ππ΅ . Segment Addition Postulate If B is between A and C, then AB+BC=AC. If AB+BC=AC, then B is between A and C. Angle Addition Postulate If R is in the interior of β πππ, then πβ πππ
+πβ π
ππ=πβ πππ. If πβ πππ
+πβ π
ππ=πβ πππ, then R is in the interior of β πππ.
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Angles formed by Parallel lines
Transversals Corresponding Alternate Interior Alternate Exterior Consecutive
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Reasoning Inductive Reasoning Deductive Reasoning Conjecture
Uses specific examples to arrive at a general conclusion Lacks logical certainty Deductive Reasoning Uses facts, rules, definitions, or properties to reach logical conclusions Conjecture Educated guess
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If-Then Statements A compound statement in the form βif A, then Bβ, where A and B are statements Statement Any sentence that is true or false, but not both Compound Statement A statement formed by joining two or more statements
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If-Then Statements Hypothesis Conclusion Counterexample Negation
Statement that follows if in a conditional Conclusion Statement that follows then in a conditional Counterexample Used to show that a statement is not always true Negation Adds not to statement (~)
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If-Then Statements Conditional Statement (πβπ) Converse (πβπ)
Statement that can be written in if-then form Converse (πβπ) Exchanging the hypothesis and conclusion Inverse (~πβ~π) Negating the hypothesis and conclusion Contrapositive (~πβ~π) Exchange & negate the hypothesis & conclusion
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If-Then Statements Related Conditionals Logically Equivalent
Converses, Inverses, and conditionals that are based on a given conditional statement Logically Equivalent Statements that have the same truth value
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Law of Detachment Law of Detachment
If πβπ is true and π is true, then π is also true If an angle is obtuse, then it cannot be acute β π΄ is obtuse β π΄ cannot be acute
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Law of Syllogism Law of Syllogism
If πβπ is true and πβπ are true, then πβπ If Molly arrives at school early, she can get help in math. If Molly gets help in math, then she will pass her test. If Molly arrives at school early, the she will pass her test.
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Truth Tables A table used to organize the truth values of statements
Truth Value β The truth or falsity of a statement π π πβ§π πβ¨π T F
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False only when both statements are false
Disjunction Compound statement formed by joining two or more statements with or πβ¨π, reads p or q False only when both statements are false True when one or both statements is true Conjunction Compound statement formed by joining two or more statements with and πβ¨π, reads p and q False when one or both statements is false Both statements must be true for the conjunction to be true
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