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SUPPLEMENTARY ANGLES. 2-angles that add up to 180 degrees.

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Presentation on theme: "SUPPLEMENTARY ANGLES. 2-angles that add up to 180 degrees."— Presentation transcript:

1 SUPPLEMENTARY ANGLES

2 2-angles that add up to 180 degrees.

3 COMPLEMENTARY ANGLES

4 2-angles that add up to 90 degrees

5 Vertical Angles are congruent to each other

6 PARALLEL LINES CUT BY A TRANSVERSAL

7

8 SUM OF THE INTERIOR ANGLES OF A TRIANGLE

9 180 DEGREES

10 LARGEST ANGLE OF A TRIANGLE

11 ACROSS FROM THE LONGEST SIDE

12 SMALLEST ANGLE OF A TRIANGLE

13 ACROSS FROM THE LONGEST SIDE

14 LONGEST SIDE OF A TRIANGLE

15 ACROSS FROM THE LARGEST ANGLE

16 SMALLEST SIDE OF A TRIANGLE

17 ACROSS FROM THE SMALLEST ANGLE

18 TRIANGLE INEQUALITY THEOREM

19 The sum of 2-sides of a triangles must be larger than the 3 rd side.

20 Properties of a Parallelogram

21 Parallelogram Opposite sides are congruent. Opposite sides are parallel. Opposite angles are congruent. Diagonals bisect each other. Consecutive (adjacent) angles are supplementary (+ 180 degrees). Sum of the interior angles is 360 degrees.

22 Properties of a Rectangle

23 Rectangle All properties of a parallelogram. All angles are 90 degrees. Diagonals are congruent.

24 Properties of a Rhombus

25 Rhombus All properties of a parallelogram. Diagonals are perpendicular (form right angles). Diagonals bisect the angles.

26 Properties of a Square

27 Square All properties of a parallelogram. All properties of a rectangle. All properties of a rhombus.

28 Properties of an Isosceles Trapezoid

29 Isosceles Trapezoid Diagonals are congruent. Opposite angles are supplementary + 180 degrees. Legs are congruent

30 Median of a Trapezoid

31

32 DISTANCE FORMULA

33

34 MIDPOINT FORMULA

35

36 SLOPE FORMULA

37

38 PROVE PARALLEL LINES

39 EQUAL SLOPES

40 PROVE PERPENDICULAR LINES

41 OPPOSITE RECIPROCAL SLOPES (FLIP/CHANGE)

42 PROVE A PARALLELOGRAM

43 Prove a Parallelogram Distance formula 4 times to show opposite sides congruent. Slope 4 times to show opposite sides parallel (equal slopes) Midpoint 2 times of the diagonals to show that they share the same midpoint which means that the diagonals bisect each other.

44 How to prove a Rectangle

45 Prove a Rectangle Prove the rectangle a parallelogram. Slope 4 times, showing opposite sides are parallel and consecutive (adjacent) sides have opposite reciprocal slopes thus, are perpendicular to each other forming right angles.

46 How to prove a Square

47 Prove a Square Prove the square a parallelogram. Slope formula 4 times and distance formula 2 times of consecutive sides.

48 Prove a Trapezoid

49 Slope 4 times showing bases are parallel (same slope) and legs are not parallel.

50 Prove an Isosceles Trapezoid

51 Slope 4 times showing bases are parallel (same slopes) and legs are not parallel. Distance 2 times showing legs have the same length.

52 Prove Isosceles Right Triangle

53 Slope 2 times showing opposite reciprocal slopes (perpendicular lines that form right angles) and Distance 2 times showing legs are congruent. Or Distance 3 times and plugging them into the Pythagorean Theorem

54 Prove an Isosceles Triangle

55 Distance 2 times to show legs are congruent.

56 Prove a Right Triangle

57 Slope 2 times to show opposite reciprocal slopes (perpendicular lines form right angles).

58 Sum of the Interior Angles

59 180(n-2)

60 Measure of one Interior Angle

61 Measure of one interior angle

62 Sum of an Exterior Angle

63 360 Degrees

64 Measure of one Exterior Angle

65 360/n

66 Number of Diagonals

67

68 1-Interior < + 1-Exterior < =

69 180 Degrees

70 Number of Sides of a Polygon

71

72 Converse of P  Q

73 Change Order Q  P

74 Inverse of P  Q

75 Negate ~P  ~Q

76 Contrapositive of P  Q

77 Change Order and Negate ~Q  ~P Logically Equivalent: Same Truth Value as P  Q

78 Negation of P

79 Changes the truth value ~P

80 Conjunction

81 And (^) P^Q Both are true to be true

82 Disjunction

83 Or (V) P V Q true when at least one is true

84 Conditional

85 If P then Q P  Q Only false when P is true and Q is false

86 Biconditional

87  (iff: if and only if) T  T =True F  F = True

88 Locus from 2 points

89 The locus of points equidistant from two points, P and Q, is the perpendicular bisector of the line segment determined by the two points.

90 Locus of a Line

91 Set of Parallel Lines equidistant on each side of the line

92 Locus of 2 Parallel Lines

93 3 rd Parallel Line Midway in between

94 Locus from 1-Point

95 Circle

96 Locus of the Sides of an Angle

97 Angle Bisector

98 Locus from 2 Intersecting Lines

99 2-intersecting lines that bisect the angles that are formed by the intersecting lines

100 Reflection through the x-axis

101 (x, y)  (x, -y)

102 Reflection in the y-axis

103 (x, y)  (-x, y)

104 Reflection in line y=x

105 (x, y)  (y, -x)

106 Reflection in the origin

107 (x, y)  (-x, -y)

108 Rotation of 90 degrees

109 (x, y)  (-y, x)

110 Rotation of 180 degrees

111 (x, y)  (-x, -y) Same as a reflection in the origin

112 Rotation of 270 degrees

113 (x, y)  (y, -x)

114 Translation of (x, y)

115 T a,b (x, y)  (a+x, b+y)

116 Dilation of (x, y)

117 D k (x, y)  (kx, ky)

118 Isometry

119 Isometry: Transformation that Preserves Distance Dilation is NOT an Isometry Direct Isometries Indirect Isometries

120 Direct Isometry

121 Preserves Distance and Orientation (the way the vertices are read stays the same) Translation Rotation

122 Opposite Isometry

123 Distance is preserved Orientation changes (the way the vertices are read changes) Reflection Glide Reflection

124 What Transformation is NOT an Isometry?

125 Dilation

126 Area of a Triangle

127

128 Area of a Parallelogram

129

130 Area of a Rectangle

131

132 Area of a Trapezoid

133

134 Area of a Circle

135

136 Circumference of a Circle

137

138 Surface Area of a Rectangular Prism

139

140 Surface Area of a Triangular Prism

141

142 Surface Area of a Trapezoidal Prism

143 H

144 Surface Area of a Cylinder

145

146 Surface Area of a Cube

147

148 Volume of a Rectangular Prism

149

150 Volume of a Triangular Prism

151

152 Volume of a Trapezoidal Prism

153 H

154 Volume of a Cylinder

155

156 Volume of a Triangular Pyramid

157

158 Volume of a Square Pyramid

159

160 Volume of a Cube

161

162

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