Quadrilaterals-Notes- for grade 9 2024 tmenardpalutao
油
This document provides information about different types of quadrilaterals:
[1] It defines parallelograms as quadrilaterals with two pairs of parallel sides, and lists their key properties: opposite sides are parallel and congruent, opposite angles are congruent, and consecutive angles are supplementary. It also discusses the diagonal property.
[2] It discusses ways to prove if a quadrilateral is a parallelogram, including if opposite sides are parallel/congruent, opposite angles are congruent, or the diagonals bisect each other.
[3] It defines rectangles as parallelograms with four right angles, and notes their properties include having congruent diagonals. It also discusses rhomb
classification of quadrilaterals grade 9.pptxMeryAnnMAlday
油
This document defines and compares different types of quadrilaterals: parallelograms, rhombi, rectangles, squares, trapezoids, and kites. It provides properties and examples of each shape. Key points include: a parallelogram has two pairs of parallel opposite sides; a rhombus is a parallelogram with four congruent sides; a rectangle is a parallelogram with four right angles; a square has properties of both a rectangle and rhombus; a trapezoid has at least one pair of parallel sides; and a kite has two pairs of congruent consecutive sides. The document also covers angle sums, using properties to solve problems, and includes a logo
1. The document defines and explains the properties of parallelograms, rectangles, rhombi, squares, and trapezoids.
2. Key properties discussed include opposite sides being parallel and congruent, opposite angles being congruent, consecutive angles being supplementary, and diagonals bisecting each other.
3. Examples are provided to demonstrate applying the properties to determine missing angle measures and side lengths.
The document provides information about triangle congruence, including:
1. There are three postulates for proving triangles are congruent: side-side-side (SSS), side-angle-side (SAS), and angle-side-angle (ASA).
2. The SSS postulate states that if three sides of one triangle are congruent to three sides of a second triangle, then the triangles are congruent.
3. The SAS postulate states that if two sides and the included angle of one triangle are congruent to two sides and the included angle of a second triangle, then the triangles are congruent.
4. The ASA postulate states that if two angles
1. A parallelogram is a quadrilateral with two properties: opposite sides are parallel and opposite angles are congruent.
2. There are several types of parallelograms including rectangles, squares, and rhombi.
3. Rectangles have four right angles in addition to the properties of parallelograms. Squares have four congruent sides and four right angles. Rhombi have four congruent sides.
This document discusses properties of parallelograms, rectangles, rhombi, and squares. It defines these shapes and lists their key properties, such as opposite sides being parallel and equal lengths. Examples are given of finding missing values and angles when given information about the dimensions or angles of these quadrilaterals. The final slides reference additional math textbooks for more information.
This document discusses properties of quadrilaterals, specifically rectangles, squares, and rhombuses. It provides 3 learning objectives: 1) derive properties of diagonals of special quadrilaterals, 2) verify conditions for a quadrilateral to be a parallelogram, and 3) solve problems involving these shapes. It then presents true/false questions to assess prior knowledge, worked examples demonstrating properties and problem solving, and additional practice problems. The key properties covered are that rectangle and square diagonals are congruent and perpendicular, and rhombus diagonals bisect opposite angles and are perpendicular.
The document discusses determining what type of quadrilateral a shape is on a coordinate plane. It reviews properties of different quadrilaterals and provides steps to systematically check if a shape is a trapezoid, parallelogram, rectangle, square, or just a quadrilateral. The document then works through determining the type of quadrilateral formed by the points A(-4, -2), B(-2, 4), C(4, 2), D(2, -4) by checking properties such as parallel sides, perpendicular sides, and side lengths. Through this process, it is proven that the shape is a square.
1) The document discusses different types of quadrilaterals including parallelograms, rectangles, squares, rhombi, trapezoids, and kites.
2) Key properties of each shape are provided such as opposite sides of parallelograms being parallel and opposite angles of kites being congruent.
3) Formulas for finding the areas of different quadrilaterals are presented along with examples of using the properties and formulas to solve problems.
This document defines and describes different types of triangles based on side lengths and angle measures. It also discusses properties of triangles related to similarity, including the AAA, SSS, SAS, and RHS similarity criteria. Properties of special right triangles and the Pythagorean theorem are also covered. Types of triangles described include scalene, isosceles, equilateral, acute, obtuse, and right triangles.
This document defines and describes different types of triangles based on side lengths and angle measures. It also discusses properties of similar triangles, including the AAA, SSS, SAS, and AA similarity criteria. Properties of special right triangles and the Pythagorean theorem are also covered. Types of triangles discussed include scalene, isosceles, equilateral, acute, obtuse, and right triangles.
This document defines and describes different types of triangles based on side lengths and angle measures. It also discusses properties of triangles related to similarity, including the AAA, SSS, SAS, and RHS similarity criteria. Properties of special right triangles and the Pythagorean theorem are also covered. Types of triangles described include scalene, isosceles, equilateral, acute, obtuse, and right triangles.
8.4 properties of rhombuses, rectangles, and squaresdetwilerr
油
This document discusses properties of rhombuses, rectangles, and squares. It contains examples of classifying quadrilaterals as rhombuses or rectangles based on given properties. One example asks whether the diagonals of a window opening form a rectangle. The document also includes guided practice problems asking students to determine whether statements are always or sometimes true of certain quadrilaterals or to classify shapes. Key theorems discussed are that opposite angles of parallelograms are congruent, diagonals of rectangles are congruent and bisect each other, and properties used to define rhombuses, rectangles and squares.
This document discusses different types of quadrilaterals including parallelograms, rectangles, squares, rhombuses, and trapezoids. It provides definitions and properties of each shape. Specifically for parallelograms, it outlines four key properties: opposite sides are parallel and congruent, opposite angles are congruent, and diagonals bisect each other. Examples are given to demonstrate using these properties to determine missing angle measures, side lengths, and whether a shape satisfies the definition of a parallelogram. Rectangles and squares are defined as special types of parallelograms with additional properties like right angles.
This document discusses properties of quadrilaterals including parallelograms, rectangles, rhombuses, and squares. It provides definitions and key properties of each shape. Students are instructed to create a foldable study guide defining and comparing the different quadrilaterals. They will draw examples of each and list their distinguishing properties. The document aims to help students learn the different theorems and identify the characteristics that define special types of parallelograms.
The document contains a prayer asking God for guidance and blessing for the learning that is about to take place. It then lists different shapes - parallelogram, rectangle, rhombus, and square - and provides their key properties. Examples are given to demonstrate properties such as opposite sides being parallel and congruent for parallelograms, diagonals being congruent for rectangles, and diagonals bisecting angles for rhombuses.
The document provides information about different types of quadrilaterals and triangles, including their definitions, properties, and how to calculate their perimeters and areas. It defines squares, rectangles, parallelograms, rhombi, trapezoids, kites, and triangles. It explains key properties such as equal or parallel sides, right angles, and intersecting diagonals. It also shows examples of how to calculate perimeters by adding side lengths and areas using formulas like length x width for rectangles or (base x height)/2 for trapezoids.
This document contains a chapter from an 8th grade mathematics textbook on the topic of equal triangles. It discusses several properties of equal triangles, including:
1) If the sides of one triangle are equal to the sides of another triangle, then the angles of the triangles are also equal.
2) If one side of a triangle and the angles at its ends are equal to one side of another triangle and the angles at its ends, then the third angles are also equal and the sides opposite equal angles are equal.
3) In any parallelogram, the diagonals bisect each other and the point of intersection is the midpoint of both diagonals.
The document discusses various properties of quadrilaterals and practical geometry. It defines different types of quadrilaterals such as parallelograms, rectangles, squares, rhombuses, kites, and trapezoids. It provides examples to classify quadrilaterals based on given properties and to determine missing angles or sides. It also discusses how to construct quadrilaterals uniquely if certain measurements are given.
This document provides instruction and content for a Grade 9 mathematics module on parallelograms. It includes definitions of parallelograms and their properties. Several theorems are proved, including those regarding parallelograms, rectangles, rhombuses, the midline theorem, trapezoids, and kites. Example problems are also provided to demonstrate applying the properties and theorems of parallelograms.
This document defines and describes properties of various quadrilaterals:
- Rectangles have four right angles and opposite sides of equal length. The area formula is length x width.
- Parallelograms have two pairs of parallel sides. The opposite angles are equal and adjacent angles sum to 180 degrees. Diagonals bisect each other.
- Trapezoids have one pair of parallel sides. Isosceles trapezoids have two pairs of equal angles and equal or equal length diagonals. Right trapezoids contain one right angle. The area of any trapezoid is half the product of the height and sum of the parallel sides.
This document discusses properties of parallelograms, rectangles, rhombi, and squares. It defines these shapes and lists their key properties, such as opposite sides being parallel and equal lengths. Examples are given of finding missing values and angles when given information about the dimensions or angles of these quadrilaterals. The final slides reference additional math textbooks for more information.
This document discusses properties of quadrilaterals, specifically rectangles, squares, and rhombuses. It provides 3 learning objectives: 1) derive properties of diagonals of special quadrilaterals, 2) verify conditions for a quadrilateral to be a parallelogram, and 3) solve problems involving these shapes. It then presents true/false questions to assess prior knowledge, worked examples demonstrating properties and problem solving, and additional practice problems. The key properties covered are that rectangle and square diagonals are congruent and perpendicular, and rhombus diagonals bisect opposite angles and are perpendicular.
The document discusses determining what type of quadrilateral a shape is on a coordinate plane. It reviews properties of different quadrilaterals and provides steps to systematically check if a shape is a trapezoid, parallelogram, rectangle, square, or just a quadrilateral. The document then works through determining the type of quadrilateral formed by the points A(-4, -2), B(-2, 4), C(4, 2), D(2, -4) by checking properties such as parallel sides, perpendicular sides, and side lengths. Through this process, it is proven that the shape is a square.
1) The document discusses different types of quadrilaterals including parallelograms, rectangles, squares, rhombi, trapezoids, and kites.
2) Key properties of each shape are provided such as opposite sides of parallelograms being parallel and opposite angles of kites being congruent.
3) Formulas for finding the areas of different quadrilaterals are presented along with examples of using the properties and formulas to solve problems.
This document defines and describes different types of triangles based on side lengths and angle measures. It also discusses properties of triangles related to similarity, including the AAA, SSS, SAS, and RHS similarity criteria. Properties of special right triangles and the Pythagorean theorem are also covered. Types of triangles described include scalene, isosceles, equilateral, acute, obtuse, and right triangles.
This document defines and describes different types of triangles based on side lengths and angle measures. It also discusses properties of similar triangles, including the AAA, SSS, SAS, and AA similarity criteria. Properties of special right triangles and the Pythagorean theorem are also covered. Types of triangles discussed include scalene, isosceles, equilateral, acute, obtuse, and right triangles.
This document defines and describes different types of triangles based on side lengths and angle measures. It also discusses properties of triangles related to similarity, including the AAA, SSS, SAS, and RHS similarity criteria. Properties of special right triangles and the Pythagorean theorem are also covered. Types of triangles described include scalene, isosceles, equilateral, acute, obtuse, and right triangles.
8.4 properties of rhombuses, rectangles, and squaresdetwilerr
油
This document discusses properties of rhombuses, rectangles, and squares. It contains examples of classifying quadrilaterals as rhombuses or rectangles based on given properties. One example asks whether the diagonals of a window opening form a rectangle. The document also includes guided practice problems asking students to determine whether statements are always or sometimes true of certain quadrilaterals or to classify shapes. Key theorems discussed are that opposite angles of parallelograms are congruent, diagonals of rectangles are congruent and bisect each other, and properties used to define rhombuses, rectangles and squares.
This document discusses different types of quadrilaterals including parallelograms, rectangles, squares, rhombuses, and trapezoids. It provides definitions and properties of each shape. Specifically for parallelograms, it outlines four key properties: opposite sides are parallel and congruent, opposite angles are congruent, and diagonals bisect each other. Examples are given to demonstrate using these properties to determine missing angle measures, side lengths, and whether a shape satisfies the definition of a parallelogram. Rectangles and squares are defined as special types of parallelograms with additional properties like right angles.
This document discusses properties of quadrilaterals including parallelograms, rectangles, rhombuses, and squares. It provides definitions and key properties of each shape. Students are instructed to create a foldable study guide defining and comparing the different quadrilaterals. They will draw examples of each and list their distinguishing properties. The document aims to help students learn the different theorems and identify the characteristics that define special types of parallelograms.
The document contains a prayer asking God for guidance and blessing for the learning that is about to take place. It then lists different shapes - parallelogram, rectangle, rhombus, and square - and provides their key properties. Examples are given to demonstrate properties such as opposite sides being parallel and congruent for parallelograms, diagonals being congruent for rectangles, and diagonals bisecting angles for rhombuses.
The document provides information about different types of quadrilaterals and triangles, including their definitions, properties, and how to calculate their perimeters and areas. It defines squares, rectangles, parallelograms, rhombi, trapezoids, kites, and triangles. It explains key properties such as equal or parallel sides, right angles, and intersecting diagonals. It also shows examples of how to calculate perimeters by adding side lengths and areas using formulas like length x width for rectangles or (base x height)/2 for trapezoids.
This document contains a chapter from an 8th grade mathematics textbook on the topic of equal triangles. It discusses several properties of equal triangles, including:
1) If the sides of one triangle are equal to the sides of another triangle, then the angles of the triangles are also equal.
2) If one side of a triangle and the angles at its ends are equal to one side of another triangle and the angles at its ends, then the third angles are also equal and the sides opposite equal angles are equal.
3) In any parallelogram, the diagonals bisect each other and the point of intersection is the midpoint of both diagonals.
The document discusses various properties of quadrilaterals and practical geometry. It defines different types of quadrilaterals such as parallelograms, rectangles, squares, rhombuses, kites, and trapezoids. It provides examples to classify quadrilaterals based on given properties and to determine missing angles or sides. It also discusses how to construct quadrilaterals uniquely if certain measurements are given.
This document provides instruction and content for a Grade 9 mathematics module on parallelograms. It includes definitions of parallelograms and their properties. Several theorems are proved, including those regarding parallelograms, rectangles, rhombuses, the midline theorem, trapezoids, and kites. Example problems are also provided to demonstrate applying the properties and theorems of parallelograms.
This document defines and describes properties of various quadrilaterals:
- Rectangles have four right angles and opposite sides of equal length. The area formula is length x width.
- Parallelograms have two pairs of parallel sides. The opposite angles are equal and adjacent angles sum to 180 degrees. Diagonals bisect each other.
- Trapezoids have one pair of parallel sides. Isosceles trapezoids have two pairs of equal angles and equal or equal length diagonals. Right trapezoids contain one right angle. The area of any trapezoid is half the product of the height and sum of the parallel sides.
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Types of parallelogram under Rhombuses.ppt
1. Geometry CCSS: G.CO 11.
PROVE theorems about parallelograms. Theorems
INCLUDE: opposite sides ARE congruent, opposite angles
ARE congruent,the diagonals of a parallelogram BISECT
each other,and conversely, rectangles ARE parallelograms
with congruent diagonals.
2. What are the properties of different
quadrilaterals? How do we use the
formulas of areas of different
quadrilaterals to solve real-life
problems?
Now a little review:
3. 1. Make sense of problems and persevere in solving
them.
2. Reason abstractly and quantitatively.
3. Construct viable arguments and critique the
reasoning of others.
4. Model with mathematics.
5. Use appropriate tools strategically.
6. Attend to precision.
7. Look for and make use of structure.
8. Look for and express regularity in repeated
reasoning.
UDE: opposite sides ARE congruent, opposite angles ARE congruent, the diagonals of a parallelogram BISECT each other, and converse
6. Rectangle Rhombus Square
Properties Properties Properties
Test your prior knowledge and try to fill in the chart
with properties of the following quadrilaterals:
7. Use properties of sides and angles of
rhombuses, rectangles, and squares.
Use properties of diagonals of
rhombuses, rectangles and squares.
8. What are properties of sides and
angles of rhombuses, rectangles, and
squares?
9. In this lesson, you will study three special
types of parallelograms: rhombuses,
rectangles and squares.
A rhombus is a parallelogram
with four congruent sides
A rectangle is a parallelogram
with four right angles.
A square is a parallelogram with
four congruent sides and four right
angles.
10. Each shape has the properties of every group that
it belongs to. For instance, a square is a rectangle,
a rhombus and a parallelogram; so it has all of the
properties of those shapes.
Rectangles
Rhombuses
parallelograms
rhombuses rectangles
squares
14. Decide whether the statement is always, sometimes, or
never true.
a. A rhombus is a rectangle.
b. A parallelogram is a rectangle.
Rectangles
Rhombuses
parallelograms
rhombuses rectangles
squares
15. Decide whether the statement is always, sometimes, or never true.
a. A rhombus is a rectangle.
The statement is sometimes true. In the Venn diagram, the regions
for rhombuses and rectangles overlap. IF the rhombus is a square, it
is a rectangle.
Rectangles
Rhombuses
parallelograms
rhombuses rectangles
squares
16. Decide whether the statement is always, sometimes, or never true.
b. A parallelogram is a rectangle.
The statement is sometimes true. Some parallelograms are
rectangles. In the Venn diagram, you can see that some of the
shapes in the parallelogram box are in the area for rectangles, but
many arent.
Rectangles
Rhombuses
parallelograms
rhombuses rectangles
squares
17. ABCD is a rectangle. What
else do you know about
ABCD?
Because ABCD is a
rectangle, it has four right
angles by definition. The
definition also states that
rectangles are
parallelograms, so ABCD
has all the properties of a
parallelogram:
Opposite sides are parallel
and congruent.
Opposite angles are
congruent and consecutive
angles are supplementary.
Diagonals bisect each
other.
18. A rectangle is defined as a parallelogram with four
right angles. But any quadrilateral with four right
angles is a rectangle because any quadrilateral
with four right angles is a parallelogram.
Corollaries about special quadrilaterals:
Rhombus Corollary: A quadrilateral is a rhombus if and
only if it has four congruent sides.
Rectangle Corollary: A quadrilateral is a rectangle if
and only if it has four right angles.
Square Corollary: A quadrilateral is a square if and only
if it is a rhombus and a rectangle.
You can use these to prove that a quadrilateral is a
rhombus, rectangle or square without proving first that
the quadrilateral is a parallelogram.
19. Characteristics Parallelogram Rectangle Rhombus Square
Both pairs of opposite sides parallel
Diagonals are congruent
Both pairs of opposite sides congruent
At least one right angle
Both pairs of opposite angles congruent
Exactly one pair of opposite sides parallel
Diagonals are perpendicular
All sides are congruent
Consecutive angles congruent
Diagonals bisect each other
Diagonals bisect opposite angles
Consecutive angles supplementary
20. In the diagram at the right,
PQRS is a rhombus. What
is the value of y?
All four sides of a rhombus are , so RS = PS
.
5y 6 = 2y + 3 Equate lengths of sides.
5y = 2y + 9 Add 6 to each side.
3y = 9 Subtract 2y from each side.
y = 3 Divide each side by 3.
5y - 6
2y + 3
P
S
Q
R
21. The following theorems
are about diagonals of
rhombuses and
rectangles.
Theorem 6.11: A
parallelogram is a
rhombus if and only if
its diagonals are
perpendicular.
ABCD is a rhombus if
and only if AC BD.
B
C
D
A
22. Theorem 6.12: A
parallelogram is a
rhombus if and only if
each diagonal bisects a
pair of opposite
angles.
ABCD is a rhombus if
and only if AC bisects
DAB and BCD and
BD bisects ADC and
CBA.
B
C
D
A
23. Theorem 6.13: A
parallelogram is a
rectangle if and only if
its diagonals are
congruent.
ABCD is a rectangle if
and only if AC BD.
A B
C
D
24. You can rewrite Theorem 6.11 as a
conditional statement and its converse.
Conditional statement: If the diagonals
of a parallelogram are perpendicular,
then the parallelogram is a rhombus.
Converse: If a parallelogram is a
rhombus, then its diagonals are
perpendicular.
25. Statements:
1. ABCD is a rhombus
2. AB CB
3. AX CX
4. BX DX
5. AXB CXB
6. AXB CXB
7. AC BD
Reasons:
1. Given
X
A
D
B
C
26. Statements:
1. ABCD is a rhombus
2. AB CB
3. AX CX
4. BX DX
5. AXB CXB
6. AXB CXB
7. AC BD
Reasons:
1. Given
2. Given
X
A
D
B
C
27. Statements:
1. ABCD is a rhombus
2. AB CB
3. AX CX
4. BX DX
5. AXB CXB
6. AXB CXB
7. AC BD
Reasons:
1. Given
2. Given
3. Def. of . Diagonals
bisect each other.
X
A
D
B
C
28. Statements:
1. ABCD is a rhombus
2. AB CB
3. AX CX
4. BX DX
5. AXB CXB
6. AXB CXB
7. AC BD
Reasons:
1. Given
2. Given
3. Def. of . Diagonals
bisect each other.
4. Def. of . Diagonals
bisect each other.
X
A
D
B
C
29. Statements:
1. ABCD is a rhombus
2. AB CB
3. AX CX
4. BX DX
5. AXB CXB
6. AXB CXB
7. AC BD
Reasons:
1. Given
2. Given
3. Def. of . Diagonals
bisect each other.
4. Def. of . Diagonals
bisect each other.
5. SSS congruence post.
X
A
D
B
C
30. Statements:
1. ABCD is a rhombus
2. AB CB
3. AX CX
4. BX DX
5. AXB CXB
6. AXB CXB
7. AC BD
Reasons:
1. Given
2. Given
3. Def. of . Diagonals
bisect each other.
4. Def. of . Diagonals
bisect each other.
5. SSS congruence post.
6. CPCTC
X
A
D
B
C
31. Statements:
1. ABCD is a rhombus
2. AB CB
3. AX CX
4. BX DX
5. AXB CXB
6. AXB CXB
7. AC BD
Reasons:
1. Given
2. Given
3. Def. of . Diagonals
bisect each other.
4. Def. of . Diagonals
bisect each other.
5. SSS congruence post.
6. CPCTC
7. Congruent Adjacent s
X
A
D
B
C
32. Assign coordinates.
Because AC BD, place
ABCD in the coordinate
plane so AC and BD lie on
the axes and their
intersection is at the origin.
Let (0, a) be the coordinates
of A, and let (b, 0) be the
coordinates of B.
Because ABCD is a
parallelogram, the
diagonals bisect each other
and OA = OC. So, the
coordinates of C are (0, - a).
Similarly the coordinates of
D are (- b, 0).
A(0, a)
B(b, 0)
C(0, - a)
D(- b, 0)
33. Find the lengths of the
sides of ABCD. Use the
distance formula (See
youre never going to get
rid of this)
AB=(b 0)2
+ (0 a)2
= b2
+ a2
BC= (0 - b)2
+ ( a - 0)2
= b2
+ a2
CD= (- b 0)2
+ [0 - ( a)]2
= b2
+ a2
DA= [(0 (- b)]2
+ (a 0)2
= b2
+ a2
A(0, a)
B(b, 0)
C(0, - a)
D(- b, 0)
All the side lengths are equal,
so ABCD is a rhombus.
34. CARPENTRY. You are
building a rectangular
frame for a theater set.
a. First, you nail four pieces
of wood together as
shown at the right. What
is the shape of the frame?
b. To make sure the frame is
a rectangle, you measure
the diagonals. One is 7
feet 4 inches. The other is
7 feet 2 inches. Is the
frame a rectangle?
Explain.
4 feet
4 feet
6 feet 6 feet
35. a. First, you nail four
pieces of wood
together as shown at
the right. What is the
shape of the frame?
Opposite sides are
congruent, so the
frame is a
parallelogram.
4 feet
4 feet
6 feet 6 feet
36. b. To make sure the
frame is a rectangle,
you measure the
diagonals. One is 7
feet 4 inches. The
other is 7 feet 2
inches. Is the frame a
rectangle? Explain.
The parallelogram is
NOT a rectangle. If it
were a rectangle, the
diagonals would be
congruent.
4 feet
4 feet
6 feet 6 feet
37. Youve just had a new door installed, but it
doesnt seem to fit into the door jamb
properly. What could you do to determine if
your new door is rectangular?
38. 1. Take out a piece
of notebook paper
and make a hot
dog fold over from
the right side over
to the pink line.
39. 2. Now, divide the right
hand section into 5
sections by drawing 4
evenly spaced lines.
The fold crease
3. Use scissors to cut
along your drawn line,
but ONLY to the crease!
41. 5. Fold over the top
cut section and write
PARALLELOGRAM
on the outside.
The fold
crease
6. Reopen the fold.
42. 7. On the left hand
section, draw a
parallelogram.
1. Opposite angles are congruent.
2. Consecutive angles are
supplementary.
3. Opposite sides are congruent.
4. Diagonals bisect each other.
5. Opposite sides are parallel
8. On the right hand
side, list all of the
properties of a
parallelogram.
43. * Fold over the
second cut section
and write
RECTANGLE on the
outside.
* Reopen the fold.
1. Opposite angles are congruent.
2. Consecutive angles are
supplementary.
3. Opposite sides are congruent.
4. Diagonals bisect each other.
5. Opposite sides are parallel
44. * On the left hand
section, draw a
rectangle.
1. Opposite angles are congruent.
2. Consecutive angles are
supplementary.
3. Opposite sides are congruent.
4. Diagonals bisect each other.
5. Opposite sides are parallel
* On the right hand
side, list all of the
properties of a
rectangle.
1. Special parallelogram.
2. Has 4 right angles
3. Diagonals are congruent.
45. * Fold over the third
cut section and write
RHOMBUS on the
outside.
* Reopen the fold.
1. Opposite angles are congruent.
2. Consecutive angles are
supplementary.
3. Opposite sides are congruent.
4. Diagonals bisect each other.
5. Opposite sides are parallel
1. Special parallelogram.
2. Has 4 right angles
3. Diagonals are congruent.
46. * On the left hand
section, draw a
rhombus.
1. Opposite angles are congruent.
2. Consecutive angles are
supplementary.
3. Opposite sides are congruent.
4. Diagonals bisect each other.
5. Opposite sides are parallel
* On the right hand
side, list all of the
properties of a
rhombus.
1. Special parallelogram.
2. Has 4 right angles
3. Diagonals are congruent.
1. Special Parallelogram
2. Has 4 Congruent sides
3. Diagonals are perpendicular.
4. Diagonals bisect opposite angles
47. * Fold over the third
cut section and write
SQUARE on the
outside.
* Reopen the fold.
1. Opposite angles are congruent.
2. Consecutive angles are
supplementary.
3. Opposite sides are congruent.
4. Diagonals bisect each other.
5. Opposite sides are parallel
1. Special parallelogram.
2. Has 4 right angles
3. Diagonals are congruent.
1. Special Parallelogram
2. Has 4 Congruent sides
3. Diagonals are perpendicular.
4. Diagonals bisect opposite angles
48. * On the left hand
section, draw a
square.
1. Opposite angles are congruent.
2. Consecutive angles are
supplementary.
3. Opposite sides are congruent.
4. Diagonals bisect each other.
5. Opposite sides are parallel
* On the right hand
side, list all of the
properties of a
square.
* Place in your
notebook and save
for tomorrow.
1. Special parallelogram.
2. Has 4 right angles
3. Diagonals are congruent.
1. Special Parallelogram
2. Has 4 Congruent sides
3. Diagonals are perpendicular.
4. Diagonals bisect opposite angles
1. All the properties of parallelogram,
rectangle, and rhombus
2. 4 congruent sides and 4 right
angles
49. Name the figure described.
1. A quadrilateral that is both a rhombus
and a rectangle.
2. A quadrilateral with exactly one pair of
parallel sides.
3. A parallelogram with perpendicular
diagonals
51. What are the properties of different
quadrilaterals? How do we use the
formulas of areas of different
quadrilaterals to solve real-life
problems?
54. A trapezoid is a
quadrilateral with
exactly one pair of
parallel sides. The
parallel sides are the
bases. A trapezoid has
two pairs of base angles.
For instance in trapezoid
ABCD D and C are
one pair of base angles.
The other pair is A and
B. The nonparallel
sides are the legs of the
trapezoid.
base
base
leg
leg
A B
D C
55. If the legs of a
trapezoid are
congruent, then the
trapezoid is an
isosceles trapezoid.
56. Theorem 6.14
If a trapezoid is
isosceles, then each
pair of base angles is
congruent.
A B, C D
A B
D C
57. Theorem 6.15
If a trapezoid has a
pair of congruent
base angles, then it is
an isosceles
trapezoid.
ABCD is an isosceles
trapezoid
A B
D C
58. Theorem 6.16
A trapezoid is
isosceles if and only
if its diagonals are
congruent.
ABCD is isosceles if
and only if AC BD.
A B
D C
59. The midsegment of a
trapezoid is the
segment that
connects the
midpoints of its legs.
Theorem 6.17 is
similar to the
Midsegment
Theorem for
triangles.
midsegment
B C
D
A
60. The midsegment of a
trapezoid is parallel
to each base and its
length is one half the
sums of the lengths of
the bases.
MNAD, MNBC
MN = 遜 (AD + BC)
N
M
A D
C
B
61. LAYER CAKE A
baker is making a
cake like the one at
the right. The top
layer has a diameter
of 8 inches and the
bottom layer has a
diameter of 20
inches. How big
should the middle
layer be?
62. Use the midsegment
theorem for
trapezoids.
DG = 遜(EF + CH)=
遜 (8 + 20) = 14 C
D
E
D
G
F
63. A kite is a
quadrilateral that has
two pairs of
consecutive
congruent sides, but
opposite sides are
not congruent.
64. Theorem 6.18
If a quadrilateral is a
kite, then its
diagonals are
perpendicular.
AC BD
B
C
A
D
65. Theorem 6.19
If a quadrilateral is a
kite, then exactly one
pair of opposite
angles is congruent.
A C, B D
B
C
A
D
66. WXYZ is a kite so the
diagonals are
perpendicular. You
can use the
Pythagorean
Theorem to find the
side lengths.
WX = 202
+ 122
23.32
XY = 122
+ 122
16.97
Because WXYZ is a kite,WZ =
WX 23.32, and ZY = XY
16.97
12
12
20
12
U
X
Z
W Y
67. Find mG and mJ
in the diagram at the
right.
SOLUTION:
GHJK is a kite, so G J and mG = mJ.
2(mG) + 132属 + 60属 = 360属Sum of measures of int. s of a quad. is 360属
2(mG) = 168属Simplify
mG = 84属 Divide each side by 2.
So, mJ = mG = 84属
J
G
H K
132属 60属
68. Quadrilaterals
4-sided polygons
Trapezoids Parallelograms Kites
1. one pair of opposite 種sides 1. 2 pairs of opposite sides 1. two pairs of
2. 2 pairs of opposite 種sides consecutive sides
2. midsegment parallel to both bases 3. 2 pairs of opposite angles 2. diagonals are
and average length of the bases 4. consecutive angles are supplementary
5. diagonals bisect each other 3. one pair of opposite
angles
Isosceles Trapezoids Rhombus Rectangle
1. legs are congruent 1. 4 sides 1. 4 right angles
2. base angles are congruent 2. diagonals are
2. diagonals are congruent
3. diagonals are congruent 3. diagonals bisect a pair of
opposite angles
Square
1. combination of rectangle and rhombus
70. 1. Make sense of problems and persevere in solving
them.
2. Reason abstractly and quantitatively.
3. Construct viable arguments and critique the
reasoning of others.
4. Model with mathematics.
5. Use appropriate tools strategically.
6. Attend to precision.
7. Look for and make use of structure.
8. Look for and express regularity in repeated
reasoning.
UDE: opposite sides ARE congruent, opposite angles ARE congruent, the diagonals of a parallelogram BISECT each other, and converse
71. PROVE theorems about parallelograms. Theorems
INCLUDE: opposite sides ARE congruent, opposite
angles ARE congruent,the diagonals of a parallelogram
BISECT each other,and conversely, rectangles ARE
parallelograms with congruent diagonals.
72. Name the figure:
1. a quadrilateral with exactly one pair of
opposite angles congruent and
perpendicular diagonals
2. a quadrilateral that is both a rhombus
and a rectangle
3. a quadrilateral with exactly one pair of ll
sides.
4. any llogram with perpendicular
diagonals.
73. Identify special quadrilaterals based on
limited information.
Prove that a quadrilateral is a special
type of quadrilateral, such as a rhombus
or trapezoid.
74. How do we simplify real life tasks,
checking if an object is rectangular,
rhombus, trapezoid, kite or other
quadrilateral?
75. In this chapter, you have
studied the seven special
types of quadrilaterals
shown at the right. Notice
that each shape has all the
properties of the shapes
linked above it. For
instance, squares have the
properties of rhombuses,
rectangles, parallelograms,
and quadrilaterals.
Quadrilateral
Kite Parallelogram Trapezoid
Rhombus Rectangle
Square
Isosceles
trapezoid
76. Quadrilateral ABCD has at least one pair
of opposite sides congruent. What kinds
of quadrilaterals meet this condition?
Parallelogram
Opposite sides
are congruent.
Rhombus
All sides are
congruent.
Opposites
sides are
.
All sides are
congruent.
Legs are
congruent.
77. When you join the
midpoints of the
sides of any
quadrilateral, what
special
quadrilateral is
formed? Why?
H G
F
E
A
D
B
C
78. Solution: Let E, F, G, and H
be the midpoints of the
sides of any quadrilateral,
ABCD as shown.
If you draw AC, the
Midsegment Theorem for
triangles says that FGAC
and EGAC, so FGEH.
Similar reasoning shows that
EFHG.
So by definition, EFGH is a
parallelogram.
H G
F
E
A
D
B
C
79. When you want to prove that a
quadrilateral has a specific shape, you
can use either the definition of the shape
as in example 2 or you can use a
theorem.
80. You have learned 3 ways to prove that a quadrilateral is a
rhombus.
You can use the definition and show that the quadrilateral is a
parallelogram that has four congruent sides. It is easier,
however, to use the Rhombus Corollary and simply show that
all four sides of the quadrilateral are congruent.
Show that the quadrilateral is a parallelogram and that the
diagonals are perpendicular (Thm. 6.11)
Show that the quadrilateral is a parallelogram and that each
diagonal bisects a pair of opposite angles. (Thm 6.12)
81. Show KLMN is a rhombus
Solution: You can use any of the
three ways described in the
concept summary above. For
instance, you could show that
opposite sides have the same
slope and that the diagonals are
perpendicular. Another way
shown in the next slide is to prove
that all four sides have the same
length.
AHA DISTANCE FORMULA If
you want, look on pg. 365 for the
whole explanation of the distance
formula
So, because LM=NK=MN=KL,
KLMN is a rhombus.
8
6
4
2
-2
5
L(-2, 3)K(2, 5) = 4.47 cm
L(-2, 3)M(2, 1) = 4.47 cm
M(2, 1)N(6, 3) = 4.47 cm
K(2, 5)N(6, 3) = 4.47 cm
N(6, 3)
M(2, 1)
L(-2, 3)
K(2, 5)
82. What type of quadrilateral
is ABCD? Explain your
reasoning.
A
D
C
B
60属
120属
120属
60属
83. What type of quadrilateral is
ABCD? Explain your reasoning.
Solution: A and D are
supplementary, but A and B
are not. So, ABDC, but AD is not
parallel to BC. By definition, ABCD
is a trapezoid. Because base angles
are congruent, ABCD is an isosceles
trapezoid
A
D
C
B
60属
120属
120属
60属
84. The diagonals of quadrilateral ABCD intersect at
point N to produce four congruent segments: AN
BN CN DN. What type of quadrilateral is
ABCD? Prove that your answer is correct.
First Step: Draw a diagram. Draw the diagonals as
described. Then connect the endpoints to draw
quadrilateral ABCD.
85. First Step: Draw a diagram.
Draw the diagonals as
described. Then connect the
endpoints to draw
quadrilateral ABCD.
2nd
Step: Make a conjecture:
Quadrilateral ABCD looks
like a rectangle.
3rd
step: Prove your
conjecture
Given: AN BN CN DN
Prove ABCD is a rectangle.
A
B
C
D
N
86. Because you are given information about diagonals, show
that ABCD is a parallelogram with congruent diagonals.
First prove that ABCD is a parallelogram.
Because BN DN and AN CN, BD and AC bisect each
other. Because the diagonals of ABCD bisect each other,
ABCD is a parallelogram.
Then prove that the diagonals of ABCD are congruent.
From the given you can write BN = AN and DN = CN so, by
the addition property of Equality, BN + DN = AN + CN. By
the Segment Addition Postulate, BD = BN + DN and AC =
AN + CN so, by substitution, BD = AC.
So, BD AC.
ABCD is a parallelogram with congruent diagonals, so
ABCD is a rectangle.