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THIS IS With Host... Your 100 200 300 400 500 Anglers Choice Tri- it out! Is a Square just a Square? The 3 rd Dimension Geo. Splash You should see.

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Presentation on theme: "THIS IS With Host... Your 100 200 300 400 500 Anglers Choice Tri- it out! Is a Square just a Square? The 3 rd Dimension Geo. Splash You should see."— Presentation transcript:

1

2

3 THIS IS

4 With Host... Your

5 100 200 300 400 500 Anglers Choice Tri- it out! Is a Square just a Square? The 3 rd Dimension Geo. Splash You should see the view from here, Net(a)!

6 An angle that measures less than 90º A 100

7 Acute Angle A 100

8 An angle that measures exactly 180º A 200

9 Straight Angle A 200

10 The supplementary angle to an angle measuring 43º A 300

11 137º A 300

12 The type of angle shown here: A 400

13 Obtuse angle A 400

14 The measure of two congruent angles, that together would be complementary angles. A 500

15 45º A 500

16 The two ways a triangle can be named. B 100

17 By it’s angles and measures of it’s sides B 100

18 The type of triangle shown below: B 200

19 Acute Scalene B 200

20 The measures of all the angles inside an equilateral triangle. B 300

21 60º B 300

22 The type of triangle shown here: B 400

23 Obtuse Isosceles B 400

24 In an Obtuse Isosceles Triangle, two of the angles measure 43º and 94º, the measure of the third angle is this. B 500

25 43º B 500

26 Any 4-sided polygon is called this. C 100

27 Quadrilateral C 100

28 A 4-sided polygon, with exactly one set of parallel lines. C 200

29 Trapezoid C 200

30 A 4-sided polygon whose opposite sides are congruent and parallel C 300

31 Parallelogram C 300

32 DAILY DOUBLE C 400 DAILY DOUBLE Place A Wager

33 A 4-sided polygon that is equilateral and equiangular C 400

34 Square C 400

35 The 4 angles inside all 4-sided polygons add up to this. C 500

36 360º C 500

37 A 3-dimensional figure with flat plane surfaces. D 100

38 Polyhedron D 100

39 The number of vertices on the figure shown below: D 200

40 5

41 A 3-dimensional figure with 6 square faces D 300

42 cube D 300

43 Three examples discussed in class of Non-Polyhedrons. D 400

44 Cone, Sphere, & Cylinder D 400

45 The number of edges shown on the figure below: D 500

46 27 D 500

47 A 2-dimensional pattern that can be folded to form a 3- dimensional figure. E 100

48 Net E 100

49 Geometry term meaning exactly the same. E 200

50 Congruent E 200

51 The term used to describe a polygon with congruent sides and angles. E 300

52 Regular E 300

53 A geometry term meaning all angles are congruent. E 400

54 Equiangular E 400

55 A 7-sided polygon. E 500

56 Heptagon E 500

57 The 3-dimensional figure that will be made with the net below: F 100

58 Pentagonal Pyramid F 100

59 This 3-dimensional figure from the side and front looks like a triangle and from the top you can see the circular base and the single vertex. F 200

60 Cone F 200

61 No matter what perspective you view this polyhedron from you will see a rectangle. F 300

62 Rectangular Prism F 300

63 The 3-dimensional figure that will be made with the net below: F 400

64 Cylinder F 400

65 The net of this 3- dimensional figure is composed of 4 triangles. F 500

66 Triangular Pyramid F 500

67 The Final Jeopardy Category is: Polygons Please record your wager. Click on screen to begin

68 List three things a polygon can have or cannot have that classifies it as a polygon. Click on screen to continue

69 -Cannot have curves (straight sides) -Must be closed (can’t be open) -Must have at least three sides -Must be “simple” (no intersections, criss- crosses) Click on screen to continue

70 Thank You for Playing Jeopardy! Game Designed By C. Harr-MAIT


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