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Chapter 6 Quadrilaterals. Section 6.1 Polygons Polygon A polygon is formed by three or more segments called sides –No two sides with a common endpoint.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 6 Quadrilaterals. Section 6.1 Polygons Polygon A polygon is formed by three or more segments called sides –No two sides with a common endpoint."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 6 Quadrilaterals

2 Section 6.1 Polygons

3 Polygon A polygon is formed by three or more segments called sides –No two sides with a common endpoint are collinear. –Each side intersects exactly two other sides, one at each endpoint. –Each endpoint of a side is a vertex of the polygon. –Polygons are named by listing the vertices consecutively.

4 Identifying polygons State whether the figure is a polygon. If not, explain why.

5 Polygons are classified by the number of sides they have NUMBER OF SIDES TYPE OF POLYGON 3 4 5 6 7 NUMBER OF SIDES TYPE OF POLYGON 8 9 10 12 N-gon triangle quadrilateral pentagon hexagon heptagon octagon nonagon decagon dodecagon N-gon

6 Two Types of Polygons: 1.Convex: If a line was extended from the sides of a polygon, it will NOT go through the interior of the polygon. Example:

7 2. Concave: If a line was extended from the sides of a polygon, it WILL go through the interior of the polygon. Example:

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9 Regular Polygon A polygon is regular if it is equilateral and equiangular A polygon is equilateral if all of its sides are congruent A polygon is equiangular if all of its interior angles are congruent

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11 Diagonal A segment that joins two nonconsecutive vertices.

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13 Interior Angles of a Quadrilateral Theorem The sum of the measures of the interior angles of a quadrilateral is 360° 1 4 2 3

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16 Section 6.2 Properties of Parallelograms

17 Parallelogram A quadrilateral with both pairs of opposite sides parallel

18 Theorem 6.2 Opposite sides of a parallelogram are congruent.

19 Theorem 6.3 Opposite angles of a parallelogram are congruent

20 Theorem 6.4 Consecutive angles of a parallelogram are supplementary. 1 2 3 4

21 Theorem 6.5 Diagonals of a parallelogram bisect each other.

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25 Section 6.3 Proving Quadrilaterals are Parallelograms

26 Theorem 6.6 To prove a quadrilateral is a parallelogram: Both pairs of opposite sides are congruent

27 Theorem 6.7 To prove a quadrilateral is a parallelogram: Both pairs of opposite angles are congruent.

28 Theorem 6.8 To prove a quadrilateral is a parallelogram: An angle is supplementary to both of its consecutive angles. 1 2 3 4

29 Theorem 6.9 To prove a quadrilateral is a parallelogram: Diagonals bisect each other.

30 Theorem 6.10 To prove a quadrilateral is a parallelogram: One pair of opposite sides are congruent and parallel. > >

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33 Section 6.4 Rhombuses, Rectangles, and Squares

34 Rhombus Parallelogram with four congruent sides.

35 Rectangle Parallelogram with four right angles.

36 Square Parallelogram with four congruent sides and four congruent angles. Both a rhombus and rectangle.

37 Theorem 6.11 Diagonals of a rhombus are perpendicular.

38 Theorem 6.12 Each Diagonal of a rhombus bisects a pair of opposite angles.

39 Theorem 6.13 Diagonals of a rectangle are congruent.

40 Section 6.5 Trapezoids and Kites

41 Trapezoid Quadrilateral with exactly one pair of parallel sides. Parallel sides are the bases. Two pairs of base angles. Nonparallel sides are the legs. > > Base Leg

42 Isosceles Trapezoid Legs of a trapezoid are congruent.

43 Theorem 6.14 Base angles of an isosceles trapezoid are congruent. > > A B C D

44 Theorem 6.15 If a trapezoid has one pair of congruent base angles, then it is an isosceles trapezoid. > > A B C D ABCD is an isosceles trapezoid

45 Theorem 6.16 Diagonals of an isosceles trapezoid are congruent. > A B C D > ABCD is isosceles if and only if

46 Examples on Board

47 Midsegment of a trapezoid Segment that connects the midpoints of its legs. Midsegment

48 Midsegment Theorem for trapezoids Midsegment is parallel to each base and its length is one half the sum of the lengths of the bases. A B C D M N MN= (AD+BC)

49 Examples on Board

50 Kite Quadrilateral that has two pairs of consecutive congruent sides, but opposite sides are not congruent.

51 Theorem 6.18 Diagonals of a kite are perpendicular. A B C D

52 Theorem 6.19 In a kite, exactly one pair of opposite angles are congruent. A B C D

53 Examples on Board

54 Pythagorean Theorem a b c

55 Section 6.6 Special Quadrilaterals

56 Properties of Quadrilaterals Property RectangleRhombusSquareTrapezoidKite Both pairs of opposite sides are congruent Diagonals are congruent Diagonals are perpendicular Diagonals bisect one another Consecutive angles are supplementary Both pairs of opposite angles are congruent X X X XX X X X X XXXX X XX X XX XX

57 Properties of Quadrilaterals Quadrilateral ABCD has at least one pair of opposite sides congruent. What kinds of quadrilaterals meet this condition? PARALLELOGRAM RHOMBUS RECTANGLE SQUARE ISOSCELES TRAPEZOID

58 Section 6.7 Areas of Triangles and Quadrilaterals

59 Area Congruence Postulate If two polygons are congruent, then they have the same area.

60 Area Addition Postulate The area of a region is the sum of the areas of its non-overlapping parts.

61 Area Formulas PARALLELOGRAM RECTANGLESQUARE A=bhA=lw TRIANGLE

62 Area Formulas RHOMBUS KITE

63 Area Formulas TRAPEZOID h


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