ASAAngle/Side/Angle : ASAAngle/Side/Angle ASA is a rule used in geometry to prove triangles are congruent. The rule states that if 2 angles and the included side of one triangle are congruent to 2 angles and the included side of another triangle, the triangles are congruent.
AASAngle/Angle/Side : AASAngle/Angle/Side AAS is used in geometry to prove triangles are congruent. The rules state that if 2 angles and a non-included side of 1 triangle are congruent to 2 angles and the corresponding non-included side of another triangle the 2 triangles are congruent.
CPCTCCorresponding Parts of Congruent Triangle Are Congruent/Equal : CPCTCCorresponding Parts of Congruent Triangle Are Congruent/Equal When 2 triangles are congruent, all 6 pairs of corresponding parts {angles & sides} are congruent. This statement is usually simplified as corresponding parts of congruent triangles are congruent. If
then the following conditions are true:
E q u i v a l e n c er e l a t i o n s : E q u i v a l e n c er e l a t i o n s Reflexivity: a ~ a
*Every triangle is congruent to itself
Symmetry: if a ~ b then b ~ a
Transitive: if a ~ b and b ~ c then a ~ c.
Slide 17 : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 <1, <5
<2,<6
<3,<7
<4,<8 Corresponding angles <3, <5
<4, <6 Alternate Interior Angles <1, <7
<2, <8 Alternate Exterior Angles In geometry, adjacent angles are angles that have a common ray coming out of the vertex going between two other rays. Ex. Of adjacent Angles
Supplementary Angles : Supplementary Angles A pair of angles are supplementary if their respective measures sum to 180°.
If the two supplementary angles are adjacent (i.e. have a common vertex and share a side, but do not have any interior points in common) their non-shared sides form a line.
Complementary Angles : Complementary Angles A pair of angles are complementary if the sum of their angles is 90°.
If the two complementary angles are adjacent (i.e. have a common vertex and share a side, but do not have any interior points in common) their non-shared sides form a right angle.
Slide 20 : Area of Circle= πr²
Arc length= circumference-2πr * Area/360
Arc length=Circumference multiplied by πr² divided by 2πr
Area of a sector= A= mAB/360 * πr² (
What π = : What π =
Slide 22 :
Slide 23 : l- length
b- base
h- height
W- width
a- just a side
s- side