Awesome Angles
Triangle Talk
Popular Polygons
Line Lingo
Mixed Bag
100
An angle that measures 35 degrees that has been added to an angle that measures 145 degrees.
What is a supplementary angle?
100
A triangle whose sides measure 5 inches, 7 inches and 4.5 inches.
What is an equilateral triangle?
100
The type of polygon that forms a STOP sign.
What is a hexagon
100
Lines that are always the same distance apart and will never touch or cross.
What are parallel lines?
100
The branch of mathematics that investigates relations, properties and measurements of solids, surfaces, lines and angles.
What is Geometry?
200
Two angles that have a common vertex and a common side. They "sit" side by side.
What are adjacent angles?
200
A subset or part of a line that contains two points of the line and all points in between those two points.
What is a line segment?
200
The solution to the equation x+95=4x-10
What is x=35
300
Two non adjacent angles that are on the same side of an intersecting line, one between the parallel lines and one outside the parallel lines.
What are corresponding angles?
300
A five sided polygon.
What is a pentagon?
300
A set of points extending without end in opposite directions.
What is a line?
300
There are eight of these in a gallon.
What are pints?
400
Two non-adjacent angles formed by two straight intersecting lines. These angles are equal.
What are vertical angles?
400
Two triangles that have three pairs of corresponding angles and corresponding sides are not the same, but are proportional.
What are similar triangles?
400
A quadrilateral whose opposite sides are parallel.
What is a parallelogram?
400
Two lines that form a right angle.
What are perpendicular lines?
400
The area of a triangle with a base of 5 feet and a height of 8 feet.
What is 20 feet?
500
Two triangles that have the exact same angle measurements and side lengths.
What are congruent triangles?
500
A straight line that intersects two or more straight lines.
What is a transversal?
500
The solution to the equation 3(x+4)=12+3x
What is an identity (or infinitely many solutions)?