501 Geometry Questions Second Edition
501 Geometry Questions Second Edition
501 Geometry Questions Second Edition
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Increase Your Geometry Skills and Score Higher on
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This comprehensive study guide takes you step-by-step though 501 geometry questions,
helping you brush up on your math skills, gain effective problem-solving techniques,
and prepare for academic exams. Each question is accompanied by a complete answer
explanation, so you can clearly see what you did right and in what areas you need
to improve.
501 Geometry Questions will help you:
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501 GEOMETRY QUESTIONS.indd 1 3/7/12 9:41 AM
GEOMETRY
QUESTIONS
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GEOMETRY
QUESTIONS
N E W Y O R K
2nd Edition
5
0
1
5
0
1
, SR
, RT
,
TR
, ST
, TS
, RST
, and TSR
and
SR
. Ray names RT
and RS
and TR
and RS
describe a
ray beginning at endpoint R and extending innitely through T
and S. TS
and TR
and ST
are opposite rays. Of the four rays listed, they are the
only pair of opposite rays; they share an endpoint and extend
innitely in opposite directions.
16. Line segments have two endpoints and can go by two names. It
does not matter which endpoint comes rst. RT
is TR
; RS
is SR
;
and ST
is TS
.
Set 4
17. Any six of these names correctly describes the horizontal line: NP
,
PN
, NO
, ON
, PO
, OP
, NOP
, PON
,
ON
, and OQ
. Ray-names NO
and NP
are interchangeable, as
are ray names PO
and PN
and NP
and PN
and OP
and MN
. LN
and LM
is ML
; MN
is
NM
; LN
is NL
; KM
is MK
; KL
is LK
.
501 Geometry Questions
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Set 6
24. a. Three noncollinear points determine a plane. In this case, we
know level X is a plane and Ann, Bill, and Carl represent points on
that plane. Ann and Bill together are not enough points to dene
the plane; Dan isnt on plane X and choice d doesnt make sense.
Choice a is the only option.
25. d. Unlike a plane, an ofce oor can hold only so many people;
however, imagine the ofce oor extending innitely in every
direction. How many people could it hold? An innite number.
26. d. Just as the ofce oor can represent a plane, Ann and Bill can
represent points. They acquire the characteristics of a point; and as
we know, points have no dimension, and two points make a line.
27. b. Ann, Bill, and Carl are all on the same oor, which means they
are all on the same plane, and they are not lined up. That makes
them noncollinear but coplanar.
28. d. Carl and Dan represent two points; two points make a line; and
all lines are collinear and coplanar. Granted, Dan and Carl are on
two different oors; but remember points exist simultaneously on
multiple planes.
14
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If there is any one secret of success,
it lies in the ability to get the other persons point of view
and see things from that persons angle as well as from your own.
Henry Ford
When Henry Ford talks about understanding some elses angle, he
is referring to their perspective. There are an innite number of perspec-
tives that exist, and the number of angles that can exist is also innite.
What is not innite, however, is how we categorize angles. In this chap-
ter, you will learn how to classify all types of angles by their measurements.
The Parts of an Angle
Remember chapter 1 dened an angle as two rays sharing an endpoint and
extending innitely in different directions. The common endpoint is called
the vertex. The rays are each called sides.
M
L
N
M is a vertex
ML is a side
MN is another side
1
2
Types of Angles
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Classifying Angles
Angles are measured in degrees, which are a measurement of how much
one side of an angle is rotated away from the other side. Degrees do not
measure distance or length. The symbol used for degrees is . Remember
that angles are usually named with three letters, starting with a point on one
side, followed by the vertex point, and ending with a point on the other side.
It doesnt matter which side is named rst. The following angle can be
named RSB or BSR.
If a given vertex is a vertex for only one angle, than that point can be used
to name the angle as well. For example, in the previous gure, RSB can
also be called S. In the following angle, A cannot be used as a name
because point A is the vertex for KAS as well as for KAM. Therefore if
A was used, it would not be clear which angle was being referred to.
Angles are classied by their relationship to the degree measures of 90
and 180:
Straight angles: An angle that measures 180 will look like a straight line
and is called a straight angle.
Right angles: An angle that measures 90 is called a right angle. Right
angles have their own symbol to show they are 90. A small square is drawn
Figure 2.3
B A C
Figure 2.2
A
K
S M
S
R
B
Figure 2.1
16
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17
at the vertex of right angles to note their unique nature, as shown in Fig-
ure 2.4.
Acute angles: An angle that is larger than 0 but smaller than 90 is called
an acute angle. (A clever way to remember this is to think, What a cute
little angle!)
Obtuse angles: An angle that is larger than 90 but smaller than 180 is
called an obtuse angle. (Do you like rhymes? That obtuse is as big as a
moose!)
Reex angle: An angle that is larger than 180 but smaller than 360 is
called a reexive angle. There are no names for angles larger than 360.
Figure 2.7
A
B C
180 < mABC < 360,
REFLEX
Figure 2.6
B
A
C
90 < mABC < 180,
OBTUSE
B
A
C
0 < mABC < 90
ACUTE
Figure 2.5
Figure 2.4
mABC = 90,
RIGHT
B
A
C
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Set 7
Choose the best answer.
29. Angles that share a common vertex point cannot
a. share a common angle side.
b. be right angles.
c. use the vertex letter name as an angle name.
d. share interior points.
Choose the answer that incorrectly names an angle in each preceding
gure.
30. a. CDE
b. CED
c. D
d. 1
31. a. R
b. QRS
c. XRS
d. XRQ
R Q S
X
D
C
1
E
18
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32. a. KMN
b. NMO
c. KML
d. M
Set 8
Choose the best answer.
33. True or False: An acute angle plus an acute angle will always give
you an obtuse angle.
34. A straight angle minus an obtuse angle will give you an acute
angle. Is this statement sometimes, always, or never true?
35. A right angle plus an acute angle will give you an obtuse angle. Is
this statement sometimes, always, or never true?
36. An obtuse angle minus an acute angle will give you an acute
angle. Is this statement sometimes, always, or never true?
Set 9
Label each angle measurement as acute, right, obtuse, straight, or
reexive.
37. 13.5
38. 90
39. 246
M
K
2
O
L N
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40. 180
41.
42.
43.
Set 10
For each diagram in this set, name every angle in as many ways as
you can. Then label each angle as acute, right, obtuse, straight, or
reexive.
44.
45.
46.
S
O
R
1
E T
O
J
M
S
L A X
L
K
M
20
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47.
48.
49.
50.
2
1
J
M
K
N
3 4
W
2
1
V
U
Y
C
B
A
501 Geometry Questions
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Answers
Set 7
29. c. If a vertex is shared by more than one angle, then it cannot be
used to name any of the angles.
30. b. CED describes an angle whose vertex is E, not D.
31. a. If a vertex is shared by more than one angle, then the letter
describing the vertex cannot be used to name any of the angles. It
would be too confusing.
32. d. If a vertex is shared by more than one angle, then the letter
describing the vertex cannot be used to name any of the angles. It
would be too confusing.
Set 8
33. False. Two small acute angles do not have to have a sum greater
than 90. For example, 10 + 20 = 30, which is still acute.
34. Always. Since a straight angle equals 180, and an obtuse angle is
between 90 and 180, the difference of a straight angle and an
obtuse angle will always be between 0 and 90.
35. Always. A right angle is 90 and an acute angle is greater than
0and less than 90. Therefore, the sum of a right angle and an
acute angle will always be greater than 90 but less than 180.
36. Sometimes. An obtuse angle that measures 95 minus an acute
angle that measures 20 will result in an angle that measures 75
and is acute. However, the same obtuse angle that measures 95
minus an acute angle that measures 4 will result in an angle that
measures 91 and is obtuse. Lastly, the same obtuse angle that
measures 95 minus an acute angle that measures 5 will result in
an angle that measures 90 and is a right angle.
22
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Set 9
37. Acute. 0 < 13.5 < 90.
38. Right angle. 90.
39. Reexive. 180 < 246 < 360.
40. Straight angle. 180.
41. Obtuse. KLM is greater than 90 and less than 180.
42. Straight. KLM is a straight line which measures 180.
43. Right. MJS is equal 90.
Set 10
44. Acute. TOE, EOT, or O.
45. Obtuse. 1.
46. Right. ROS, SOR, or O.
47. Right. ABY or YBA.
Right. YBC or CBY.
Straight. ABC and CBA.
48. Acute. 1.
Acute. 2.
Right. UVW or WVU.
49. Since the vertex point is not labeled, the only angle that can be
named by letter using a letter is , which is reexive because it is
greater than 180 and less than 360
Right. 3.
Acute. 4.
50. Reexive. 1.
Acute. 2.
501 Geometry Questions
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Every angle or shape that we come across in geometry or in the real
world is made up of intersecting lines. However, there are also two special
cases where lines do not intersect.
Parallel lines are coplanar lines that never intersect. Instead, they travel
similar paths at the same distance from each other at all times. Lines a and
b below in Figure 3.1 are parallel; the symbol used to represent parallel lines
is a || b. Another symbol used to indicate when two lines are parallel are
the corresponding arrows you see in the gure. Sometimes corresponding
tick marks are used instead of arrows.
Figure 3.1
Parallel lines
a and b
a
b
3
Working with Lines
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Skew lines are noncoplanar lines that never intersect. They exist in two
different planes, and travel dissimilar paths that will never cross. This is
hard to draw, because it is hard to represent different planes in a two-
dimensional drawing, but lines a and b below are skew. There is no sym-
bol to represent skew lines.
Intersecting Lines
When two lines are not parallel or skew, they will intersect. When two lines
intersect, the point of the intersection is a point that exists on both lines
it is the only point that the lines have in common. Two intersecting lines
create four angles. In Figure 3.3 below, line a and line b intersect at point
c, creating the four different angles, d, e, f, and g. When two lines inter-
sect, the sum of the four angles they create is 360. You can tell this is true
by looking at line b: angles e and f make a straight angle above line b, so they
add to 180, and angles d and g make a straight angle below line b, so they
also add to 180. Therefore, the four angles together add to 360.
Now that you understand how intersecting lines create angles, it is time
to learn about the special relationships that can exist between angles. When
the sum of the measurement of any two angles equals 180, the angles are
called supplementary angles.
c
b
a
d
f
g
e
Figure 3.3
Figure 3.2
Skew lines
a and b
a
b
26
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When straight lines intersect, the two angles next to each other are called
adjacent angles. They share a vertex, a side, and no interior points. Adjacent
angles along a straight line are always supplementary.
When straight lines intersect, opposite angles, or angles nonadjacent to
each other, are called vertical angles. They are always congruent or equal
in measure. The symbol for congruent is .
When two lines intersect and form four right angles, the lines are con-
sidered perpendicular.
Three-Lined Intersections
A transversal line intersects two or more lines, each at a different point.
Because a transversal line crosses at least two other lines, eight or more
angles are created. When a transversal intersects a pair of parallel lines, cer-
tain angles are always congruent or supplementary. Pairs of these angles
have special names:
1 2
3 4
1 2 3 4
m1 = m2 = m3 = m4 = 90
1
2
3
4
1 3, m1 = m3
2 4, m2 = m4
a
b
1
2
3
4
m1 + m2 = 180
m2 + m3 = 180
m3 + m4 = 180
m4 + m1 = 180
m1 + m2 + m3 + m4 = 360
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Corresponding angles are angles in corresponding positions.
Look for a distinctive F shaped gure.
When a transversal intersects a pair of parallel lines, corresponding angles
are congruent.
Interior angles are angles inside a pair of crossed lines.
Look for a distinctive I shaped gure.
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
Interior
Angles
4
3
6
5
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
Angle
1
2
3
4
Corresponding Angle
5
6
7
8
28
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Same-side interior angles are interior angles on the same side of a trans-
versal line.
Look for a distinctive C shaped gure.
When a transversal intersects a pair of parallel lines, same-side interior
angles are supplementary.
Alternate interior angles are interior angles on opposite sides of a
transversal line.
Look for a distinctive Z shaped gure.
When a transversal intersects a pair of parallel lines, alternate interior
angles are congruent.
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
Alternate Interior Angles
4 6
3 5
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
Same Side Interior Angles
3 6
4 5
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When a transversal is perpendicular to a pair of parallel lines, all eight
angles are congruent.
There are also exterior angles, same-side exterior angles, and alter-
nate exterior angles. They are positioned by the same common-sense
rules as the interior angles.
Two lines are parallel if any one of the following statements is true:
1) A pair of alternate interior angles is congruent.
2) A pair of alternate exterior angles is congruent.
3) A pair of corresponding angles is congruent.
4) A pair of same-side interior angles is supplementary.
1 2
4 3
5 6
8 7
1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8
m1 = m2 = m3 = m4
m5 = m6 = m7
m8 = 90
30
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Set 11
Use the following diagram to answer questions 51 through 56.
51. Which set of lines are transversals?
a. l, m, o
b. o, m, n
c. l, o, n
d. l, m, n
52. A is
a. between lines l and n.
b. on lines l and n.
c. on line l, but not line n.
d. on line n, but not line l.
53. How many points do line m and line l share?
a. 0
b. 1
c. 2
d. innite
m
A
n
o
l
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54. Which lines are perpendicular?
a. n, m
b. o, l
c. l, n
d. m, l
55. How many lines can be drawn through A that are perpendicular
to line l?
a. 0
b. 1
c. 10,000
d. innite
56. How many lines can be drawn through A that are parallel to line m?
a. 0
b. 1
c. 2
d. innite
32
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Set 12
Use the following diagram to answer questions 57 through 61.
57. List all of the angles that are supplementary to 1.
58. State the special name for the following pair of angles: 13
and 16.
59. 5 is a corresponding angle to what other two angles?
60. In pairs, list all the alternate interior angles that are formed
between parallel lines l and mand transversal n.
61. List all of the angles that are congruent to 10.
m
n
1
2
5
7
6
8
4
3
9
11
12
10
13
14
16
15
l
o
l m, n o
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Set 13
Use the following diagram and the information below to determine if
lines o and p are parallel. Place a checkmark () beside statements that
prove lines o and p are parallel; place an X beside statements that nei-
ther prove nor disprove that lines o and p are parallel.
62. If 5 and 4 are congruent and equal, then ________.
63. If 1 and 2 are congruent and equal, then ________.
64. If 9 and 16 are congruent and equal, then ________.
65. If 12 and 15 are congruent and equal, then ________.
66. If 8 and 4 are congruent and equal, then ________.
p
r
1
2
5
7
6
8
4
3
9
11 12
10
13
14
16
15
o
s
34
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Set 14
Circle the correct answer True or False. It may be helpful to draw the geo-
metric situation before answering each question.
67. Angles formed by a transversal and two parallel lines are either
supplementary or congruent. True or False
68. When four rays extend from a single endpoint, adjacent angles are
always supplementary. True or False
69. Angles supplementary to the same angle or angles with the same
measure are also equal in measure. True or False
70. Adjacent angles that are also congruent are always right angles.
True or False
71. Parallel and skew lines are coplanar. True or False
72. Supplementary angles that are also congruent are right angles.
True or False
73. If vertical angles are acute, the angle adjacent to them must be
obtuse. True or False
74. Vertical angles can be reexive. True or False
75. When two lines intersect, all four angles formed are never
congruent to each other. True or False
76. The sum of interior angles formed by a pair of parallel lines
crossed by a transversal is always 360. True or False
77. The sum of exterior angles formed by a pair of parallel lines and a
transversal is always 360. True or False
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Answers
Set 11
51. d. In order to be a transversal, a line must cut across two other
lines at different points. Line o crosses lines m and l at the same
point; it is not a transversal.
52. b. When two lines intersect, they share a single point in space.
That point is technically on both lines.
53. b. Lines are straight; they cannot backtrack or bend (if they could
bend, they would be a curve, not a line). Consequently, when two
lines intersect, they can share only one point.
54. a. When intersecting lines create right angles, they are perpendicular.
55. b. An innite number of lines can pass through any given point in
spaceonly one line can pass through a point and be perpen-
dicular to an existing line. In this case, that point is on the line;
however, this rule also applies to points that are not on the line.
56. b. Only one line can pass through a point and be parallel to an
existing line.
Set 12
57. 1 is supplementary to the two angles it is adjacent to, 2 and 3.
All of the corresponding angles to 2 and 3 will also be supple-
mentary to 1. The following angles correspond to 2 : 6, 10,
14. The following angles correspond to 3 : 7, 11, and 15.
58. 13 and 15 are called vertical angles because they are the non-
adjacent angles formed by two intersecting lines. Vertical angles
are always congruent.
36
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59. 5 corresponds to 1 since it is in the same position in respect to
transversal n. 5 also corresponds to 13 since it is in the same
position in respect to transversal m. (Although they are in the same
relative position, 5 does not correspond to 9 since they share
no common line.)
60. 2 and 7 are alternate interior angles since they are inside the
parallel lines l and mand on opposite sides of transversal n. 4
and 5 are also alternate interior angles since they are inside the
parallel lines l and mand on opposite sides of transversal n.
61. 10 is congruent to 11 since they are vertical; 14 and 2 since
they are corresponding; 3 since it is congruent to 2; 15 since
they are alternate interior; and 6 and 7 since those are
corresponding and congruent to 2 and 3.
Set 13
62. . Only three congruent angle pairs can prove a pair of lines cut
by a transversal are parallel: alternate interior angles, alternate
exterior angles, and corresponding angles. Angles 5 and 4 are
alternate interior anglesnotice the Z gure.
63. X. 1 and 2 are adjacent angles. Their measurements combined
must equal 180, but they do not determine parallel lines.
64. . 9 and 16 are alternate exterior angles.
65. X. 12 and 15 are same side interior angles. Their congruence
does not determine parallel lines. When same side interior angles
are supplementary, then the lines are parallel.
66. . 8 and 4 are corresponding angles.
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Set 14
67. True. The angles of a pair of parallel lines cut by a transversal are
always either supplementary or congruent, meaning their
measurements either add up to 180, or they are the same measure.
68. False. If the four rays made two pairs of opposite rays, then this
statement would be true; however, any four rays extending from a
single point do not have to line up into a pair of straight lines; and
without a pair of straight lines there are no supplementary angle pairs.
69. True.
70. False. Adjacent angles do not always form straight lines; to be
adjacent, angles need to share a vertex, a side, and no interior
points. However, adjacent angles that do form a straight line are
always right angles.
71. False. Parallel lines are coplanar; skew lines are not.
72. True. A pair of supplementary angles must measure 180. If the
pair is also congruent, they must measure 90 each. An angle that
measures 90 is a right angle.
73. True. When two lines intersect, they create four angles. The two
angles opposite each other are congruent. Adjacent angles are
supplementary. If vertical angles are acute, angles adjacent to them
must be obtuse in order to measure 180.
74. False. Vertical angles cannot be equal to or more than 180;
otherwise, they could not form supplementary angle pairs with
their adjacent angle.
75. False. Perpendicular lines form all right angles.
76. True. Adjacent interior angles form supplementary pairs; their
joint measurement is 180. Two sets of adjacent interior angles
must equal 360.
77. True. Two sets of adjacent exterior angles must equal 360.
38
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Had enough of angles? You havent even begun! You named angles
and determined their congruence or incongruence when two lines cross. In
this chapter, you will actually measure angles using an instrument called the
protractor, a special ruler used to measure the degrees of angles.
How to Measure an Angle Using a Protractor
Most protractors have two scales along their arc. The lower scale, starting with
zero on the right, is used to measure angles that open in a counter-clockwise
arc. To measure a counter-clockwise angle, place the vertex in the circular open-
ing at the base of the protractor and extend the bottom ray through the 0
mark out to the right. In Figure 4.1, the counter clockwise angle drawn is 20:
Z
Y
X
W
1
2
Figure 4.1
4
Measuring Angles
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The second scale along the top, which begins with zero on the left, meas-
ures angles that open in a clockwise arc. To measure a clockwise angle, place
the vertex in the circular opening at the base of the protractor and extend
the bottom ray through the 0 mark out to the left. In Figure 4.2, the
clockwise angle drawn is 120:
How to Draw an Angle Using a Protractor
To draw an angle, rst draw a ray. The rays end point becomes the angles
vertex. Position the protractor as if you were measuring an angle. Choose
your scale and make a mark on the page at the desired measurement.
Remove the protractor and connect the mark you made to the vertex with
a straight edge. Voil, you have an angle.
180 0 180 0
60
60
120
Figure 4.2
40
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Adjacent Angles
Adjacent angles share a vertex, a side, and no interior points; they are
angles that lie side-by-side.
Because adjacent angles share a single vertex point, adjacent angles can be
added together to make larger angles. This technique will be particularly
useful when working with complementary and supplementary angles in
Chapter 5.
Angle and Line Segment Bisectors
The prex bi means two, as in bicycle, which has two wheels, or bicen-
tennial, which is a two-hundredth anniversary. In geometry, a bisector is
any ray or line segment that divides an angle or another line segment into
two congruent and equal parts. Sometimes you will read that a ray bisects
an angle and other times a ray may be referred to as an angle bisector,
but either way, it means that the ray divides the bisected angle into two
smaller, equal angles. In the following illustration, we can tell that CAK
is bisected by ray AR, since CAR RAK. We know these two angles are
congruent because they both have double tick marks in themwhen angles
have the same amount of tick marks, it means that they are congruent.
A
R
K
C
Figure 4.3
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Set 15
Using the diagram below, measure each angle.
78. LRQ
79. ART
80. KAL
81. KAB
82. LAB
K
Q
A
R
T
L
B
parallel
42
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43
Set 16
Using a protractor, draw a gure starting with question 83. Complete
question 87 by using your drawn gure.
83. Draw EC
.
84. ED
. Draw ED
.
85. EF
. Draw EF
.
86. EG
and EF
.
87. What is the measurement of GEC?
501 Geometry Questions
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Set 17
Choose the best answer.
88. Consider any two angles, ROT and POT. ROT and POT
are
a. supplementary angles.
b. right angles.
c. congruent angles.
d. adjacent angles.
e. No determination can be made.
89. When adjacent angles RXZ and ZXA are added, they make
a. RXA.
b. XZ.
c. XRA.
d. ARX.
e. No determination can be made.
90. Adjacent angles EBA and EBC make ABC. ABC measures
132. EBA measures 81. EBC must measure
a. 213.
b. 61.
c. 51.
d. 48.
e. No determination can be made.
91. SVT and UVT are adjacent supplementary angles. SVT
measures 53. UVT must measure
a. 180.
b. 233.
c. 133.
d. 127.
e. No determination can be made.
92. AOE is a straight angle. BOE is a right angle. AOB is
a. a reexive angle.
b. an acute angle.
c. an obtuse angle.
d. a right angle.
e. No determination can be made.
44
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45
Set 18
Answer the following questions using the gure above.
93. If IR
is a straight angle,
what is the measurement of PIA?
P
R
I L A
Figure 4.4
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Answers
Set 15
78. mLRQ = 45
79. mART = 45
80. mKAL = 174
81. mKAB = 51
82. mLAB = 135
Set 16
83.
84.
85.
86.
E C
D
F
G
E C
D
F
E C
D
E C
46
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47
87. We know that FG is a straight angle. Since FED measures 90,
that means that GED also equals 90. Since DEC + CEG
equals 90, use mDEC = 43 to determine that CEG = 47.
Set 17
88. e. ROT and POT share a vertex point and one angle side.
However, it cannot be determined that they do not share any
interior points, that they form a straight line, that they form a right
angle, or that they are the same shape and size. The answer must
be choice e.
89. a. When angles are added together to make larger angles, the
vertex always remains the same. Choices c and d move the vertex
point to R; consequently, they are incorrect. Choice b does not
name the vertex at all, so it is also incorrect. Choice e is incorrect
because we are given that the angles are adjacent; we know they
share side XZ; and we know they do not share sides XR and XA.
This is enough information to determine they make RXA.
90. c. EQUATION:
mABC mEBA = mEBC
132 81 = 51
91. d. EQUATION:
mSVT + mUVT = 180
53 + mUVT = 180
mUVT = 127
92. d. Draw this particular problem out; any which way you draw it,
AOB and BOE are supplementary. 90 subtracted from 180
equals 90. AOB is a right angle.
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Set 18
93. Since PIL is bisected by RIL, we know that PIL is divided
into two equal angles. Therefore, since mRIL = 68, it follows
that mPIL = 68.
94. Since AL
, BC
and CA
TO
OS
LO
LKO KLO
KLO is isosceles
3. Equilateral triangles have three congruent sides and three congruent
angles. The three congruent angles will always each measure 60. (This
is true because the 180 of the triangles interior angles divided by three
angles equals 60.)
ABO
AB
BO
OA
= EA
.
The last fact to keep in mind about triangles is that sum of any two sides
of a triangle must be greater than the length of the remaining third side. For
example, if two sides of a triangle are 8 and 10 the third side must be shorter
than 18. If it were longer than 18, the other two sides would not be able to
connect to the sides endpoints. This is illustrated below in AUG; notice
that when AG
= 17, BE
= 10, XY
= 10, YW
= 10, and
mX = 90.
118. PQR, where mP = 31 and mR = 89.
119. ABD, where AB
= 72, AD
= 72 and mA = 90.
120. TAR, where TA
= 20, AR
= 24, and TR
= 44.
121. DEZ, where m1 = 60 and m2 = 60.
122. CHI, where m1 = 30, m2 = 60 and m3 = 90.
123. JMR, where m1 = 5, m2 = 120 and m3 = 67.
124. KLM, where KL
= LM
= MK
.
U
A G
10 8
U
A
G
10 8
AG 18 AG 18
66
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67
Set 24
Fill in the blanks based on your knowledge of triangles and angles.
125. In right triangle ABC, if C measures 31 then the remaining
acute angle must measure ________.
126. In scalene triangle QRS, if R measures 134 and Q measures
16, then S measures ________.
127. In isosceles triangle TUV, if vertex T is supplementary to an
angle in an equilateral triangle, then base U measures ________.
128. In obtuse isosceles triangle EFG, if the base F measures 12,
then the vertex E measures ________.
129. In acute triangle ABC, if B measures 45, can C measure 30?
________.
Set 25
Choose the best answer.
130. Which of the following sets of interior angle measurements would
describe an acute isosceles triangle?
a. 90, 45, 45
b. 80, 60, 60
c. 60, 60, 60
d. 60, 50, 50
131. Which of the following sets of interior angle measurements would
describe an obtuse isosceles triangle?
a. 90, 45, 45
b. 90, 90, 90
c. 100, 50, 50
d. 120, 30, 30
501 Geometry Questions
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132. Which of the following angle measurements could not describe an
interior angle of a right angle?
a. 30
b. 60
c. 90
d. 100
133. If JNM is equilateral and equiangular, which condition would not
exist?
a. JN
= MN
b. JM
JN
c. mN = mJ
d. mM = NM
CA
OY
AR
YT
RC
B
A
C
1.5
1.4 1.4
0.75
70
30
30
80
80
0.75
R
S
Q
1.5
70
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Proving Congruency in Triangles
Now that you understand the basics of congruency, it is time to learn how
to know when two triangles are congruent. There are four different postu-
lates, or tests, that prove congruency in triangles. These postulates investi-
gate the congruency of corresponding angles and sides of triangles. If two
triangles satisfy any of these four postulates, then they are congruent. Here
are the four tests of congruency:
Test: 1 Side-Side-Side (SSS) Postulate: If three sides of one triangle
are congruent to three sides of another triangle, then the two triangles
are congruent.
Test: 2 Side-Angle-Side (SAS) Postulate: If two sides and the included
angle of one triangle are congruent to the corresponding sides and included
angle of another triangle, then the triangles are congruent.
B
A
C S
Q
R
included angle
B
A
C S
Q
R
76
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77
Test: 3 Angle-Side-Angle (ASA) Postulate: If two angles and the
included side of one triangle are congruent to the corresponding two angles
and the included side of another triangle, the triangles are congruent.
Test 4: Angle-Angle-Side (AAS) Postulate: If two angles and one non-
included side of one triangle are congruent to the corresponding two angles
and one non-included side of another triangle, then the triangles are con-
gruent. (Note: in this case, the side does not need to be an included side
between the two angles, like with the ASA postulate.)
Warning! Although it is tempting to think that Angle-Angle-Angle
would prove congruency, two triangles can have three congruent angles, but
be completely different sizes. Therefore, Angle-Angle-Angle cannot be used
to prove congruency, although it is a postulate used to prove similarity,
which is one of the topics we will cover in the next chapter.
B
A
C S
Q
R
B
A
C S
Q
R
included side
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Set 27
Choose the best answer.
142. In ABC and LMN, A is congruent to L, side BC is
congruent to side MN, and side CA is congruent to side NL.
Using the information above, which postulate proves that ABC
and LMN are congruent?
a. SSS
b. SAS
c. ASA
d. Congruency cannot be determined.
143. In ABC and LMN, C is congruent to N, side BC is
congruent to side MN, and side AC is congruent to side LN.
Using the information above, which postulate proves that ABC
and LMN are congruent?
a. SSS
b. SAS
c. ASA
d. Congruency cannot be determined.
144. In ABC and LMN, A and L are congruent, B and M are
congruent and C and N are congruent. Using the information
above, which postulate proves that ABC and LMN are congruent?
a. SSS
b. SAS
c. ASA
d. Congruency cannot be determined.
78
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79
Set 28
Use the gure below to answer questions 145 through 148.
145. Name each of the triangles in order of corresponding vertices.
146. Name the corresponding sides.
147. State the postulate that proves LMN is congruent to OPQ.
148. Find the measure of X.
50
50
60
60
L
M
O
N
R K
Q
P
Given:
LN QO
LM QO
X
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Set 29
Use the gure below to answer questions 149 through 152.
149. Name each of the triangles in order of corresponding vertices.
150. Name corresponding line segments.
151. State the postulate that proves BCD is congruent to EFG.
152. Find the measurement of y.
Set 30
Use the gure below to answer questions 153 through 156.
153. Name the three sets of congruent triangles in order of
corresponding vertices.
154. Name corresponding line segments.
155. State the postulate that proves ABC is congruent to GEF.
B E H
A C D
F G I
3
2
2 3 2
2
1.8
1.5
1.8
1.5
110
B
C
F
D
G
E
y
36
80
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81
156. How do you know that ABD GED?
Set 31
Use the gure below to answer questions 157 through 160. (Note:
Figure is not drawn to scale.)
157. Name a set of congruent triangles in order of corresponding vertices.
158. Name corresponding line segments.
159. State the postulate that proves GIJ is congruent to KML.
160. Find the measure of V.
G
I
M
L
J
60
K
V
26
Given:
JI LM
GJ KL
GI KM IM
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Set 32
Use the diagram below to answer questions 161 through 163.
161. In the gure above, which triangles are congruent? What postulate
proves it?
162. HGO is what kind of special triangle?
163. KOHmeasures ________ degrees.
B O G
H K
82
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83
Answers
Set 27
142. d. Congruency cannot be determined. In this example, you were
given Angle-Side-Side which is a postulate that proves congruency.
143. b. SAS. The angle given is the included angle between the two
sides given, and since all of the parts are corresponding, ABC and
LMN are congruent based on the Side-Angle-Side postulate.
144. d. Congruency cannot be determined. In this example, you were
given Angle-Angle-Angle which is a postulate that proves similarity,
but does not prove congruency. This fact was discussed in the last
part of this chapter.
Set 28
145. LNM and OQP
Since L 50 and QOP 50, then L is corresponding to
O. Similarly since N 60, and Q 60, then Nis
corresponding to Q. Therefore, it is correct to say that LNM
corresponds to OQP. Any order or direction will work when
naming these triangles as long as angles L and O, N and Q, and M
and P are corresponding.
146. LM
OP
MN
PQ
NL
QO
QO
L O
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148. x = 20. When a transversal crosses a pair of parallel lines,
corresponding angles are congruent; so, ORN measures 50.
OKR measures 80, and OKRs supplement, OKN, measures
100. Finally, 180 (100 + 60) = 20.
Set 29
149. CDB and EFG. (Remember to align corresponding vertices.)
150. CD
EF
DB
FG
BC
GE
GF
D F
CD
EF
GE
, BC
EF
, CA
FG
Set two: DB
DE
GH
BC
EF
HI
DC
DF
GI
84
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85
155. Side-Angle-Side:
Set one: BC
EF
, BCA EFG, CA
FG
Set two: BC
EF
HI
BCD EFD I
CD
FD
IG
156. BC
EF
HI
2 and also DC
DF
GI
2. Therefore
BCD and EFD are right isosceles triangles with two base angles
that each measure 45 and congruent hypotenuses. Since BD
ED
, DA
DG
GI
ML
IJ
LK
JG
GI
ML
IJ
LK
JG
1
2
0
0
1
2
.
A proportion is a statement that compares two equal ratios. Maybe the cur-
rent ratio of my blue pens to my black pens is 7:2 or
7
2
. If I add four more
black pens to my collection, a proportion can be used to determine how
many blue pens I must add to maintain the same ratio of blue pens to black
pens in my collection:
b
b
l
l
a
u
c
e
k
p
p
e
e
n
n
s
s
7
2
2 +
p
4
6
p
Since the new denominator of six black pens is three times bigger than
the original denominator of two black pens, I must multiply the seven blue
pens in the numerator by three also, in order to maintain the same ratio.
Therefore, I will need to have 21 blue pens, or 14 more blue pens than I had
originally, if I want to maintain the same ration of blue to black pens. Notice
that
2
6
1
reduces to
7
2
is proportional
to EF
is proportional to ED
B
B
C
E
E
D
1
6
0
=
1
x
2
Since 12 is twice as large as six, it follows that x will have to be twice as large
as 10, so x = 20. If DF
would be
nine since ABC is half as big as EDF.
88
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89
CAUTION! When working with ratios and proportions, it doesnt matter
which number goes in the numerator and which goes in the denominator
in the rst ratio. However, when you are writing out the second fraction,
you must be sure to line up the corresponding parts correctly. For exam-
ple, looking at the triangles above, the following proportion is incorrect
since the corresponding sides are not lined up correctly:
B
B
C
E
E
D
1
6
0
1
x
2
and AB
b.
1
2
2
0
=
6
x
c.
2
1
0
2
=
6
x
d.
1
6
2
=
2
x
0
measures 2 inches. If BE
measures 30 inches,
then corresponding DF
measures
a. 150 inches.
b. 60 inches.
c. 12 inches.
d. 6 inches.
55
55 55 45
45
55
12
12
6
6
20
x
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Set 34
Use the gure below to answer questions 168 through 171.
168. Name each of the triangles in order of their corresponding
vertices.
169. Name corresponding line segments.
170. State the postulate that proves similarity.
171. Find RQ
.
R
22
N
20
11
17
34
M
Q
O
94
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95
Set 35
Use the gure below to answer questions 172 through 175.
172. Name the similar triangles in order of corresponding vertices.
173. YB
= 3, YW
= 16. amd XY
= 12. Find AB
.
174. State the postulate that proves similarity.
175. Prove that WX
and YB
are parallel.
Set 36
Use the gure below to answer questions 176 through 179.
176. Name a pair of similar triangles in order of corresponding vertices.
50
7
C A
E
B
D
5X
X
Given:
AE BD
50
70
50 70
X W
A
Y B
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177. Name corresponding line segments.
178. State the postulate that proves similarity.
179. Find EC
.
Set 37
Fill in the blanks with a letter from a corresponding gure in the box
below.
180. Choice ________ is congruent to A.
181. Choice ________ is similar to A.
182. Choice ________ is congruent to B.
183. Choice ________ is similar to B.
184. Choice ________ is congruent to E.
Triangle A Triangle B Triangle C Triangle D
Triangle E Triangle F Triangle G Triangle H
Triangle I Triangle J Triangle K Triangle L
20 10 20 36 2
39
5
60
30
36 54 90 36
60 60 36
108
60
60 60
60 60
108
62 10
60 54
90 30 90
30 62
10
5
5 2 2 36
12 10
r
m
10
1
2
.
4
13
96
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97
185. Choice ________ is similar to E.
186. Choice ________ is congruent to D.
187. Choice ________ is similar to D.
188. Find the length of side m in I.
189. Find the length of side r in E.
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Answers
Set 33
164. a. The angles of a right isosceles triangle always measure 45 45
90. Since at least two corresponding angles are congruent, right
isosceles triangles are similar.
165. b. A ratio is a comparison. If one side of a triangle measures 16
inches, and a corresponding side in another triangle measures 24
inches, then the ratio is 16:24. This ratio can be simplied by
dividing each side of the ratio by the common factor 8. The
comparison now reads, 2:3 or 2 to 3. Choices a, c, and d simplify
into the same incorrect ratio of 2:1 or 1:2.
166. d. When writing a proportion, corresponding parts must parallel
each other. The proportions in choices b and c are misaligned.
Choice a looks for the line segment 20 x, not x.
167. d. First, state the ratio between similar triangles; that ratio is 10:2
or 5:1. The ratio means that a line segment in the larger triangle is
always 5 times more than the corresponding line segment in a
similar triangle. If the line segment measures 30 inches, it is 5
times more than the corresponding line segment. Create the
equation: 30 = 5x. x = 6.
Set 34
168. OQR and OMN. (Remember to align corresponding vertices.)
169. Corresponding line segments are OQ
and OM
; QR
and MN
;
RO
and NO
and NO
and MO
= 4. Since WY
AB
W
XY
A
Y
B
1
1
6
2
A
3
B
Since YB
is
1
4
the length of XY
, AB
will be
1
4
1
4
of 16 is 4, so AB
= 4.
174. Angle-Angle postulate. Since there are no side measurements to
compare, only an all-angular postulate can prove triangle similarity.
175. XY
and BY
. When alternate
interior angles are congruent, then lines are parallel. In this case,
WXY and BYA are congruent alternate interior angles. WX
and BY
are parallel.
Set 36
176. AEC and BDC. (Remember to align corresponding vertices.)
177. Corresponding line segments are AE
and BD
; EC
and DC
;
CA
and CB
= AB
+ BC
, AC
will be:
C
BC
=
E
AC
6
7
x
=
E
6
C
Since AC
, EC
.
Therefore, EC
= 42.
Set 37
180. C. Because the two angles given in A are 30 and 60, the third
angle in A is 90. Like A, choices c and i also have angles that
measure 30, 60, and 90. According to the Angle-Angle
postulate, at least two congruent angles prove similarity. To be
congruent, an included side must also be congruent. A and C
have congruent hypotenuses. They are congruent.
181. I. In the previous answer, C was determined to be congruent to
A because of congruent sides. In I, the triangles hypotenuse
measures 5; it has the same shape as A but is smaller;
consequently, they are not congruent triangles; they are only
similar triangles.
182. K. B is an equilateral triangle. Hand K are also equilateral
triangles (an isosceles triangle whose vertex measures 60 must also
have base angles that measure 60). However, only K and B are
congruent because of congruent sides.
183. H. H has the same equilateral shape as B, but they are
different sizes. They are not congruent; they are only similar.
100
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101
184. J. The three angles in E measure 36, 54, and 90. F and J
also have angles that measure 36, 54, and 90. According to the
Angle-Angle postulate, at least two congruent angles prove sim-
ilarity. To be congruent, an included side must also be congruent.
The line segments between the 36 and 90 angles in J and E
are congruent.
185. F. F has the same right scalene shape as E, but they are not
congruent; they are only similar.
186. L. The three angles in D respectively measure 62, 10, and
108. L has a set of corresponding and congruent angles, which
proves similarity; but L also has an included congruent side,
which proves congruency.
187. G. G has only one given angle; the Side-Angle-Side postulate
proves it is similar to D. The sides on either side of the 108
angle are proportional and the included angle is obviously
congruent.
188. m = 2.5. Since I A, set up the following proportion to solve
for m, which pairs the two sides opposite the 90 angles and the
two sides that are opposite the 30 angles:
2
1
0
0
m
5
Mwill be
1
4
of 10, so (
1
4
) 10 =
1
4
0
= 2.5.
189. r = 6.2. Since F E, set up the following proportion which
pairs up the two sides that are opposite the 90 angles and the two
sides that are opposite the 54 angles:
1
1
2
0
.4
5
r
.
a = 3
b = 4
c = ?
Q
S
R
104
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105
a
2
+ b
2
= c
2
3
2
+ 4
2
= c
2
9 + 16 = c
2
25 = c
2
Take the square root of each side:
25 = c
2
5 = c
Example 2: Find KL
.
a
2
+ b
2
= c
2
a
2
+ 1
2
= (2)
2
a
2
+ 1 = 2
a
2
= 1
Take the square root of each side:
a
2
= 1
a = ? L
M
K
b = 1
c = 2
7233_501 Geometry(2n#58F5F2.qxd 3/8/12 4:17 PM Page 105
Example 3: Find CD
.
a
2
+ b
2
= c
2
20
2
+ b
2
= 40
2
400 + b
2
= 1,600
b
2
= 1,200
Take the square root of each side:
b
2
= 1,200
b = 203
Additional Application of Pythagorean Theorems
The Pythagorean theorem can only nd a side of a right triangle. However,
if all the sides of any given triangle are known, but none of the angles are
known, the Pythagorean theorem can tell you whether that triangle is
obtuse or acute.
If the square of the longest side is larger than the sum of the squares of
two smaller sides, then the longest side is creating an obtuse angle between
the two smaller sides and the triangle is obtuse. Conversely, if the square of
the longest side is smaller than the sum of the squares of two smaller sides,
then the longest side creates an acute angle between the two smaller sides
and the triangle is acute.
Caution! Before using the Pythagorean theorem to determine if triangles
are acute or obtuse in the following two examples, remember this impor-
tant rule about the sides of triangles: the sum of any two sides of a triangle
must be longer than the third side, or else the triangle cannot exist.
a = 20
E
C
D
b = ?
c = 40
106
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107
Is GHI obtuse or acute?
Is JKL obtuse or acute?
a = 6
L
K
J
c = 9
b = 8
Therefore, JKL is acute.
100 > 81
6
2
+ 8
2
a
2
+ b
2
36 + 64
c
2
9
2
81
a = 6
H
I
G
b = 8
c = 12
Therefore, GHI is obtuse.
100 < 144
6
2
+ 8
2
a
2
+ b
2
36 + 64
c
2
12
2
144
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Set 38
Choose the best answer.
190. If the sides of a triangle measure 3, 4, and 5, then the triangle is
a. acute.
b. right.
c. obtuse.
d. It cannot be determined.
191. If the sides of a triangle measure 12, 13, and 16, then the triangle is
a. acute.
b. right.
c. obtuse.
d. It cannot be determined.
192. If the sides of a triangle measure 15, 17, and 22, then the triangle is
a. acute.
b. right.
c. obtuse.
d. It cannot be determined.
193. If the sides of a triangle measure 8, 10, and 18, then the triangle is
a. acute.
b. right.
c. obtuse.
d. It cannot be determined.
194. If the sides of a triangle measure 12, 12, and 15, then the triangle is
a. acute.
b. right.
c. obtuse.
d. It cannot be determined.
195. If two sides of a triangle measure 4 and 14, and an angle measures
34, then the triangle is
a. acute.
b. right.
c. obtuse.
d. It cannot be determined.
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109
196. If the sides of a triangle measure 12, 16, and 20, then the triangle is
a. acute.
b. right.
c. obtuse.
d. It cannot be determined.
Set 39
Choose the best answer.
197. Eva and Carr meet at a corner. Eva turns 90 left and walks 5
paces; Carr continues straight and walks 6 paces. If a line segment
connected them, it would measure
a. 22 paces.
b. 25 paces.
c. 36 paces.
d. 61 paces.
198. The legs of a square table measure 3 feet long and the top edges
measure 4 feet long. If the legs are connected to the table at a right
angle, then what is the diagonal distance from the bottom of a leg
to the adjacent corner of the tabletop?
a. 5 feet
b. 7 feet
c. 14 feet
d. 25 feet
199. Dorothy is standing 300 meters directly below a plane. She sees
another plane ying straight behind the rst. It is 500 meters away
from her, and she has not moved. How far apart are the planes
from each other?
a. 40 meters
b. 400 meters
c. 4,000 meters
d. 40,000 meters
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200. A surveyor is using a piece of equipment to measure a rectangular
plot of property. Standing on one of the corners she sights the
corner property boundary directly north of her as being 10 meters
away. Then she turns 90-degrees to her right and sights the east-
most corner as being 15 meters away. How far is the surveyor
from the northeast corner that is diagonally opposite from where
she is standing?
a. 35 feet.
b. 50 feet.
c. 225 feet.
d. 325 feet.
Set 40
Use the gure below to answer questions 201 through 203.
201. Which triangles in the gure above are congruent and/or similar?
202. Find the value of x.
203. Find the value of y.
B
C
T
D
F
y
3x
4 18
E S
Given:
CD BD
FD FE BT BS DT
110
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111
Set 41
Use the gure below to answer questions 204 through 206.
204. Find UV
.
209. Find AC
.
A
F
G
B
D
E
C
x
x
2
1
AE CE
FE ED
AG BG
Given:
13 2
SU VU
SV ZY
S U
Y Z X
V W
a
Given:
SZ SY VY WX
UY = 7
SY = 5 2
7
1
0
112
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113
Answers
Set 38
190. b. This is a popular triangle, so know it well. A 3-4-5 triangle is a
right triangle. Apply the Pythagorean theorem: a
2
+ b
2
= c
2
. 3
2
+ 4
2
= 5
2
. 9 + 16 = 25. 25 = 25.
191. a. Plug the given measurements into the Pythagorean theorem:
12
2
+ 13
2
= 16
2
. 144 + 169 = 256. 313 > 256. Acute.
192. a. Plug the given measurements into the Pythagorean theorem
(the largest side is always c in the theorem): 15
2
+ 17
2
= 22
2
. 225 +
289 = 484. 514 > 484. When the sum of the smaller sides squared
is greater than the square of the largest side, then the triangle is
acute.
193. d. In order for a triangle to exist, the sum of the length of any two
sides needs to be longer than the length of third side. The given
sides, 8, 10, and 18, do not make a triangle since the sum of the
smaller two sides is only 18, which is equal to, but not greater than,
the third side.
194. a. Plug the given measurements into the Pythagorean theorem:
12
2
+ 12
2
= 15
2
. 144 + 144 = 225. 288 > 225. Acute.
195. d. The Pythagorean theorem does not include any angles. Without
a third side or a denite right angle, this triangle cannot be
determined.
196. b. This is also a 345 triangle. Simplify the measurement of each
side by dividing 12, 16, and 20 by 4:
1
4
2
= 3.
1
4
6
= 4.
2
4
0
= 5.
197. d. The corner forms the right angle of this triangle; Eva and Carr
walk the distance of each leg, and the question wants to know the
hypotenuse. Plug the known measurements into the Pythagorean
theorem: 5
2
+ 6
2
= c
2
. 25 + 36 = c
2
. 61 = c
2
. 61 = c.
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198. a. The connection between the leg and the tabletop forms the
right angle of this triangle.The length of the leg and the length of
the top are the legs of the triangle, and the question wants to know
the distance of the hypotenuse. Plug the known measurements into
the Pythagorean theorem: 3
2
+ 4
2
= c
2
. 9 + 16 = c
2
. 25 = c
2
. 5 = c.
If you chose answer d, you forgot to take the square root of 25. If
you chose answer b, you added the legs together without squaring
them rst.
199. b. The rst plane is actually this triangles right vertex. The
distance between Dorothy and the second plane is the hypotenuse.
Plug the known measurements into the Pythagorean theorem:
300
2
+ b
2
= 500
2
. 90,000 + b
2
= 250,000. b
2
= 160,000. b = 400. Notice
that if you divided each side by 100, this is another 3-4-5 triangle.
200. d. The bases of Timmys walls form the legs of this right triangle.
The hypotenuse is unknown. Plug the known measurements into
the Pythagorean theorem: 10
2
+ 15
2
= c
2
. 100 + 225 = c
2
. 325 = c
2
.
325 = c.
Set 40
201. SBT and EFD are congruent to each other (Side-Angle-Side
theorem) and similar to BDC (Angle-Angle theorem).
202. x = 4. Because BCD is an isosceles right triangle, BD
is con-
gruent to CD
UV
, so to nd the measurement of SU
, plug the
given measurements of SUY into the Pythagorean theorem. 7
2
+
b
2
= (52)
2
. 49 + b
2
= 50. b
2
= 1. b = 1 = 1.
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115
Set 41
205. a = 2. SU
+ UV
= ZY
. SU
= UV
. Since SU
= 1 as demonstrated in
question 204, ZY
= 1 + 1 = 2.
206. Acute. ZSY is an isosceles triangle. Two of its sides measure
52 . The third side measures 2. Plug the given measures into the
Pythagorean theorem. 2
2
+ (52)
2
= (52)
2
. Thus, 4 + 50 = 50;
54 > 50. Therefore, ZSY is acute.
Set 42
207. x = 13. Even though you dont know the measurement of x in
ABF, you do know that two sides measure x. Plug the measure-
ments of ABF into the Pythagorean theorem. x
2
+ x
2
= (132)
2
.
2x
2
= 338. x
2
= 169. x = 13.
208. AG =
16
2
9
. Since AG
BG
16
2
9
.
209. 262 + 2. The ratio between corresponding line segments AE and
FE is 132 + 1:1. Since FD = 2, AC is twice the size of AE.
Set 43
210. AFE and BGE are congruent (Side-Side-Side postulate).
ABF and BCG are congruent (Side-Side-Side postulate).
211. w = 21. Plug the measurements of ECD into the Pythagorean
theorem: 3
2
+ w
2
= (152)
2
. 9 + w
2
= 450. w
2
= 441. w = 21.
212. x = 7. Corresponding parts of congruent triangles are congruent
(CPCTC). If EC
is 21, then EA
is also congruent to BE
. If BE
is
21 and FE
is 7, subtract 7 from 21 to nd BF
. 21 7 = 14.
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214. z = 212 . Plug the measurements of BEC into the Pythagorean
theorem: 21
2
+ 21
2
= z
2
. 441 + 441 = z
2
. 882 = z
2
. 212 = z.
215. Obtuse. You could just guess that mBGC > 90. However, the
question wants you to use the Pythagorean theorem to show
(710 )
2
+ 14
2
< (212)
2
.
116
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Polygons are closed geometric figures that have three or more
straight line segments as sides. Two sides of a polygon are adjacent sides
if they are next to each other and share an angle. Similarly, adjacent angles
are angles that are next to one another, separated only by one side of the
polygon. Polygons have interior angles at each of their vertices. The more
sides a polygon has, the larger the sum of its interior angles becomes. For
example, the sum of the interior angles of a triangle is 180 and the sum of
a rectangles interior angles is 360. Polygons have diagonals, which are
line segments that connect any two non-adjacent angles.
Naming Polygons
Polygons are named by listing all of their vertices in clockwise or counter-
clockwise order. Polygons are most basically classied by the number of sides
they have. The classication can become more specic based on information
about a polygons angles or sides. For example, a regular polygon is equilat-
eral (has all sides of equal length) as well as equiangular (all interior angles are
equal in measure). The following gure is regular octagon ABCDEFGH
(octa means eight, so an octagon is an eight-sided polygon).
10
Properties of
Polygons
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Vertices of a convex polygon all point outwards. All of the interior angles
of convex angles are less than 180. Pentagon ABCDE below is convex
(penta means ve, so a pentagon is a ve-sided polygon).
If any of the vertices of a polygon point inward or if the measure of any ver-
tex exceeds 180, the polygon is a concave polygon. In heptagon
ABCDEFG below, D is greater than 180, so it is a concave polygon.
F
G
D
E
A
C
m D > 180, therefore polygon ABCDEFG is concave.
D
E
A
B
C
m A, B, C, D, E, < 180
D
E F
G
H
A B
C
1
2
3
4
5 6
7
8
sides: AB = BC = CD = DE = EF = FG = GH = HA
interior s: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
118
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119
Finally, lets discus how polygons are named by the number of sides they
have. By now you are familiar with three-sided polygons or triangles. A
regular triangle is an equilateral triangle. A four-sided polygon is called a
quadrilateral. A regular quadrilateral is a square. Polygons with ve sides
or more take special prexes. Study these names below:
Five-sided PENTAgon
Six-sided HEXAgon
Seven-sided HEPTAgon
Eight-sided OCTAgon
Nine-sided NONAgon
Ten-sided DECAgon
Twelve-sided DODECAgon
SET 44
State whether the object is or is not a polygon and why. (Envision
each of these objects as simply as possible, otherwise there will always
be exceptions.) If the object is a polygon, name the polygon as specif-
ically as possible.
216. a picture frame for a 5 7 photo
217. Manhattans grid of city blocks
218. branches of a tree
219. the block letter M carved into the tree
220. half of a peanut butter and jelly sandwich that was cut diagonally
into equal parts
221. a balloon
222. a stop sign
223. lace
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Set 45
Use the diagram below to answer questions 224 through 226.
224. Name the polygon. Is it convex or concave?
225. How many diagonals can be drawn from vertex O?
226. Based on the number of triangles that are created from the
diagonals drawn from vertex O, what is the sum of the interior
angles of this 6-sided polygon?
Set 46
Use the diagram below to answer questions 227 through 229.
227. Name the polygon. Is it convex or concave?
228. How many diagonals can be drawn from vertex O?
L
R
M
N
P
Q
O
A
B
C
D
O
E
120
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121
229. Based on the number of triangles created from the diagonals
drawn from vertex O, what is the sum of the interior angles of this
7-sided polygon?
Set 47
Use the diagram below to answer questions 230 through 232.
230. Name the polygon. Is it convex or concave?
231. How many diagonals can be drawn from vertex O?
232. Based on the number of triangles created from the diagonals
drawn from vertex O, what is the sum of the interior angles of this
8-sided polygon?
S X
Y
V
U W
O
Z
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Set 48
Use the diagram below to answer questions 233 through 235.
233. Name the polygon. Is it convex or concave?
234. How many diagonals can be drawn from vertex O?
235. Based on the number of triangles created from the diagonals
drawn from vertex O, what is the sum of the interior angles of this
9-sided polygon?
Set 49
Use your knowledge of polygons to ll in the blanks.
236. In polygon CDEFG, CD
and DE
are ________.
237. In polygon CDEFG, CE
, DF
and EG
are ________.
238. In polygon CDEFG, EFG is also named ________.
239. In polygon CDEFG, DEF and EFG are ________.
P
H
I
J
K
L
M N
O
HI IJ
Given:
JK
KL LM MN
NO OP PH
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123
Set 50
Use diagonals to draw the triangles below.
240. How many non-overlapping triangles can be drawn in the
accompanying polygon at one time?
241. Determine the sum of the polygons interior angles by using the
number of triangles; verify your answer by using the formula
s = 180(n 2), where s is the sum of the interior angles and n is
the number of sides the polygon has.
242. How many non-overlapping triangles can be drawn in the
accompanying polygon at one time?
243. Determine the sum of the polygons interior angles using the
number of triangles; then apply the formula s = 180(n 2) to
verify your answer.
K L
M
N
P
B
C
D
F
G
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244. How many non-overlapping triangles can be drawn in the
accompanying polygon at one time?
245. Determine the sum of the polygons interior angles using the
number of triangles; then apply the formula s = 180(n 2) to
verify your answer.
An irregular octagon
S
T
U
V
W
X
Y Z
124
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125
Answers
Set 44
216. Rectangle. A frame is a quadrilateral with four 90-degree angles.
217. Not a polygon. A grid is not a polygon because its lines intersect
at points that are not endpoints.
218. Not a polygon. Branches are open, and they branch out at
points that are also not endpoints.
219. Concave Dodecagon. A block letter is a closed multi-sided gure;
each of its line segments begin and end at an endpoint. A block
letter M will not have any curves and it will have 12 sides and
three interior angles that exceed 180.
220. Triangle If the bread was square to begin, then it would be a right
isosceles triangle. If it was a rectangular slice of bread then it
would be a right scalene triangle.
221. Not a polygon. A balloon is either round or oval, but it does not
have straight sides with vertices.
222. Regular octagon. A stop sign is an 8-sided polygon with all sides
of equal length.
223. Not a polygon. Like the human face, lace is very intricate. Unlike
the human face, lace has lots of line segments that meet at lots of
different points.
Set 45
224. Hexagon ABCDOE. As long as you list the vertices in
consecutive order, any one of these names will do: BCDOEA,
CDOEAB, DOEABC, OEABCD, EABCDO. Hexagon
ABCDOE is concave because the measurement of vertex O
exceeds 180.
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225. Three diagonals can be drawn from vertex O: OA
, OB
, OC
.
OD
and OE
, OM
, ON
,
OP
.
229. 900. Four diagonals can be drawn from vertex O, so there are ve
triangles created. Therefore, the sum of the interior angles of this
7-sided polygon is 180(5) = 900.
Set 47
230. Octagon SUVWXOYZ. If you list every vertex in consecutive
order, then your name for the polygon given is correct. Also,
octagon SUVWXOYZ is concave. The measures of vertices U,
W, O and Z exceed 180.
231. Five diagonals can be drawn from vertex O: OZ
, OS
, OU
,
OV
, OW
.
232. 1080. Five diagonals can be drawn from vertex O, so there are six
triangles created. Therefore, the sum of the interior angles of this
8-sided polygon is 180(6) = 1080.
Set 48
233. Nonagon HIJKLMNOP. List every vertex in consecutive order
and your answer is correct. Also, nongon HIJKLMNOP is
regular and convex.
126
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127
234. Six diagonals can be drawn from vertex O: OH
, OI
, OJ
, OK
,
OL
, and OM
.
235. 1260. Six diagonals can be drawn from vertex O, so there are
seven triangles created. Therefore, the sum of the interior angles
of this 9-sided polygon is 180(7) = 1260.
Set 49
236. Adjacent sides. Draw polygon CDEFG to see that yes, CD
and
DE
measures 18 inches.
b. LM
measures 24 inches.
c. diagonal LN is perpendicular to diagonal KM.
d. all of the above
e. It cannot be determined.
Set 54
Use the gure below to answer questions 268 through 270.
268. Using your knowledge that a rhombus has two pairs of parallel
sides, show that diagonals AC and BD intersect perpendicularly.
(You cannot just state the a rhombus has perpendicular diagonals.)
269. Using your knowledge of triangles and quadrilaterals, what is the
length of imaginary side BP?
270. Using your knowledge of triangles and quadrilaterals, what is the
length of diagonal DB?
A B
P C D
12
12
12 8
12
a
o
mBCA = 72
mBDA = 18
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Answers
Set 51
246. c. Rectangles and rhombuses have very little in common with
isosceles trapezoids except one set of parallel lines, one set of
opposite congruent sides, and four interior angles that measure
360.
247. b. The interior angles of a quadrilateral total 360. Choices a and c
are incorrect because the question states each line segment
connects end-to-end; this is a closed gure, but it is not necessarily
a square.
248. d. Looking at the illustration, ABCD represents square K and
WXYZ represents square R. Since X and W are midpoints, it
stands that AX
AW
could be half of AB
is if WX
and
AW
and DB
are
intersecting straight lines, if one angle of intersection measures
90, all four angles of intersection measure 90, which means the
lines perpendicularly meet.
269. a = 45 . BP
s
93
24
148
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149
Set 56
276. b. Each gure except trapezoid B has a perimeter of 84 feet; its
perimeter measures only 80 feet.
277. d. Apply the formula p = ns to each choice. In choice a, the
perimeter of the backyard measures 12 feet 4 sides, or 48 feet. In
choice b, the perimeter of the pool measures 8 feet 6 sides, or 48
feet. In choice c, the perimeter of the patio measures 6 feet 8
sides, or 48 feet. In choice d, the perimeter of the Jacuzzi measures
4 feet by 10 sides, or 40. It is obvious that the Jacuzzi has a
different perimeter.
278. a. Since Square S has four sides that are s long, its perimeter is 4s.
Since Rectangle R has a perimeter that is twice as large as square S,
the perimeter of rectangle R is (4s)(2) = 8s. It is also known the that
the length of rectangle R is 3s so put these things into the
perimeter formula and solve for width:
P = 2l + 2w
8s = 2(3s) + 2w
8s = 6s + 2w
2s = 2w
w = s
279. a. To nd the measure of each side, change the formula p = ns to
n
p
7
8
2
si
f
d
e
e
e
s
t
and BH
is
congruent to ED
and QR
are congruent.
Plug the measurements of SQR into the Pythagorean theorem:
12
2
+ x
2
= 20
2
. 144 + x
2
= 400. x
2
= 256. x = 16.
290. y = 12. Opposite sides of a rectangle are congruent. OQ
equals the
sum of WT
, TS
, and SR
to side EC
measures 38
inches, then corresponding line segment DC
measures half as
much, or 19 inches.
294. p = 270 inches. Add the measure of each exterior line segment
together: 2(42 + 38 + 10) + 2(21 + 19 + 5) = 180 + 90 = 270 inches.
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Perimeter is the distance around an object. In this chapter youll work
with area, which is the amount of surface covered by an object. For exam-
ple, the number of tiles on a kitchen oor would be found by using an area
formula, while the amount of baseboard used to surround the room would
be found by using a perimeter formula. Perimeter is always expressed in
linear units. Area is always expressed in square units.
If the perimeter of a gure is the outline of a gure, then the area of a
gure is what is inside the outline; area is the amount of two-dimensional
space that a planar gure occupies.
As youll see on the next page, area is measured in two-dimensional
squares. Therefore, the notation for area always includes an exponent of
two to indicate two-dimensional space. For example, 40 square meters
means 40 squares that are one meter by one meter. This is written as 40m
2
.
13
Area of Polygons
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Now that you see how area is measured in smaller square units, lets look
at the formulas used to calculate area in different polygons.
A square equals 1 foot by 1 foot
The area of rectangle ABCD equals 10 squares by 7 squares,
or 70 square feet
Squares
Since the length and width in squares are the same size, it is typical to refer
to both of these dimensions as s. The formula for the area of a square is the
length of one of its sides times itself.
Area of a Square = (side) (side), or A = s
2
side
side
= 1 square foot
A
C D
1
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
B
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Rectangles
The dimensions of a rectangle are referred to as the length and width. The
formula for the area of a rectangle is length times width.
Area of a Rectangle = (length) (width), or A = lw
Triangles
The following rectangle has been divided into two equal triangles by a diag-
onal. Since the area of the rectangle is length times width, you can proba-
bly guess that the area of one of the triangles would be half of length times
width. With triangles, the names length and width are not commonly
used: side BC
.
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
3 ft.
1
0
AB = 10 ft.
AC = 8 ft.
Area of regular hexagon
HCDEFG = 45 ft.
2
P Q
M
N O
R
4 ft.
3 ft.
15 ft.
8 ft.
164
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165
317. Find the area of CHI.
318. Find the area of ABC.
319. Find the entire area of gure ABCDEFGH.
Set 67
Use the gure and information below to answer questions 320
through 322.
320. Find the measurement of side x.
321. Find the measurement of side y.
322. Find the measurement of side z.
K
R
M N
O
P Q
10
A
L
y
x
z
RO = x
RM = y
NO = z
Area of RMNO = Area of RQPO
Area of RMNOPQ = 320 sq. ft.
Area of RMA = 50 sq. ft.
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Answers
Set 62
295. b. Points, lines, and planes do not occupy space, but gures
do.The area of a gure is how much space that gure occupies,
always represented by a positive number. Choice a is incorrect
because area is never a negative number. Choice c is incorrect
because the area of a plane is innite; when you measure area, you
are only measuring a part of that plane inside a polygon.
296. c. Area is a 2-dimensional measurement of space within a planar
gure, so it is always expressed in square units, such as four miles
2
to indicate the two dimensions.
297. c. The area of a closed gure is equal to the area of its
nonoverlapping parts. This answer doesnt have to be broken
down into all trianglesquadrilateral CDEH is a part of the
gure. However, none of the answers can include quadrilateral
CDEH and CEH because they share interior points. Also,
AHG is not part of the closed gure; in fact, it isnt closed at all.
298. d. The height of a triangle is always a line segment from the base to
a vertex, forming a 90-degree angle. The most important thing
about height is that it forms a right angle with the base.
299. b. An apothem extends from the center of a polygon to a side of
the polygon. All apothems are perpendicular bisectors and only
span half the length of a polygon. A radius (to be discussed in a
later chapter) extends from the center point of a polygon to any
vertex. Two consecutive radii form a central angle. Apothems are
not radii.
Set 63
300. False. The rhombus is not a square, it is a tilted square which
makes its height less than 5 feet. Consequently, the area of the
square is 25 square feet, but the area of the rhombus is less than 25
square feet.
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167
301. False. A parallelogram is not a rectangle. It is a tilted rectangle
which makes its height less than 5 feet in this example. Conseqently,
the area of the rectangle is 50 square feet, but the area of the
parallelogram is less than 50 square feet.
302. True. If two squares can t into one rectangle, then the rectangle
has twice the area of one square.
303. True. Like the squares and rectangle above, if two rhombuses can
t into one parallelogram, then the parallelogram has twice the
area of one rhombus.
304. True. One triangle has an area of 25 square feet. The trapezoid
has an area that measures 75 square feet. Three triangles t into
one trapezoid or the area of one triangle is a third of the area of
the trapezoid.
5
5 + 5 = 10
5
5
5
5 + 5 = 10
5
5
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Set 64
305. 64 feet
2
. If one side of the square measures 8 feet, the other three
sides of the square each measure 8 feet. Multiply two sides of the
square to nd the area: 8 feet 8 feet = 64 square feet.
306. 100 feet
2
. Sides and angles of a regular polygon are equal so, if
one side measures 10 feet, the other sides will also measure 10 feet.
The perimeter of this pentagon measures 50 feet (10 5 = 50) and
its apothem measures 4 feet, so the area of the pentagon measures
1
2
4 feet 50 feet = 100 square feet.
307. 93 feet
2
. To nd the height of equilateral DEF, draw a
perpendicular line segment from vertex E to the midpoint of DF
.
This line segment divides DEF into two congruent right
triangles. Plug the given measurement into the Pythagorean
theorem: (
1
2
6)
2
+ b
2
= 6
2
; 9 + b
2
= 36; b = 27 ; b = 33 .
To nd the area, multiply the height by the base: 33 feet 6 feet
= 183 square feet. Then, take half of 183 to get 93 .
308. 100 r
2
+ 1r
The area of the larger square will be 10 10 = 100. The area of the
smaller contained rectangle will be A = l w = (r)(r 1) = r
2
1r.
To nd the area of the shaded region, subtract the smaller gure
from the larger: 100 (r
2
1r) = 100 r
2
+ 1r.
309. 2413 163
Solve for the height AO of ABC by using leg BO = 12,
hypotenuse AB = 14, and the Pythagorean theorem: 14
2
= 12
2
+ a
2
,
52 = a
2
, a = 213 . Then A =
1
2
(b)(h) =
1
2
(24)( 213 ) = 2413 ,
which is the area of ABC. Do the same for DEF using a leg of 4
and a hypotenuse of 8: 8
2
= b
2
+ 4
2
, 48 = b
2
, 43 = b. Then A =
1
2
(b)(h) =
1
2
(8)(43) = 163, which it the area of DEF. Subtract
the area of DEF from the area of ABC to get the shaded area.
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169
310. 10.5 feet
2
. Find the area of a rectangle with sides 6 feet and 3 feet:
A = 6 ft. 3 ft. = 18 sq. ft. Find the area of both triangular voids:
Area of the smaller triangular void =
1
2
(3 ft. 1 ft.) = 1.5 sq. ft. Area
of the larger triangular void =
1
2
(6 ft. 2 ft.) = 6 sq. ft. So, the total
area of the triangular voids is 1.5 ft. + 6 ft. = 7.5 sq. ft. Subtract 7.5
sq. ft. from 18 sq. ft. (the area of the full rectangle) and 10.5 square
feet remain.
Set 65
311. 480 feet
2
. You can either treat gure ABCD like a trapezoid or
like a parallelogram and a triangle. However you choose to work
with the gure, you must begin by nding the measurement of ED
to RV
. XW
perpendicularly bisects RV
1
2
3 ft. 4 ft. = 6 sq. ft. 76 sq. ft. 6 sq ft. = 70 square feet.
Set 66
316. DE
= 5 feet. To nd DE
1
2
p 3 ft.; p = 30 ft. The perimeter of a regular polygon equals the
length of each side multiplied by the number of sides: 30 ft. =
s ft. 6.; s = 5 ft.
317. 6 feet
2
. ACH is an isosceles triangle. A line drawn from its vertex
to AC
= mCI
, or
1
2
of 8
feet long. Since question 316 found the measurement of HC
, only
the measurement of HI
1
2
(8)(6) =
24 feet
2
.
319. 81 square feet. The areas within the entire gure are the sum of
its parts: 24 sq. ft. + 6 sq. ft. + 6 sq. ft. + 45 sq. ft. = 81 square feet.
170
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Set 67
320. 22 feet. The area of trapezoid RMNO plus the area of trapezoid
RQPO equals the area of gure RMNOPQ. Since trapezoids
RMNO and trapezoid RQPO are congruent, their areas are equal:
1
2
(320 sq. ft.) = 160 sq. ft. The congruent height of each trapezoid
is known, and one congruent base length is known (MA ).
Using the equation to nd the area of a trapezoid, create the
equation: 160 sq. ft. =
1
2
(10 ft.)(10 ft. + x). 160 sq. ft. = 50 sq. ft. +
5x ft. 110 sq. ft. = 5x ft. 22 feet = x.
321. 102 feet. Work backwards using the given area of RMA: 50 sq. ft.
=
1
2
b(10 ft.). 50 sq. ft. = 5 ft. b. 10 ft. = b. Once the base and
height of RMA are established, use the Pythagorean theorem to
nd RM
: 10
2
+ 10
2
= c
2
. 100 + 100 = c
2
. 200 = c
2
. 102 = c.
RM
= 102 feet.
322. 226 feet. Imagine a perpendicular line from vertex N to the
base of trapezoid RMNO. This imaginary line divides RO
into
another 10-foot segment. The remaining portion of line RO
is 2
feet long. Use the Pythagorean theorem to nd the length of NO
:
(10 ft.)
2
+ (2 ft.)
2
= z
2
. 100 sq. ft. + 4 sq. ft. = z
2
. 104 sq. ft. = z
2
.
226 feet = z.
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A prism is a polygon in three dimensions. A cube is a square prism that
you are probably familiar with. Shoeboxes and pizza boxes are rectangular
prisms. Prisms have two congruent polygons as ends, and their sides are
made up of parallelograms. The sides of prisms are called faces, while the
congruent ends are referred to as bases. The surface area of a prism refers
to the collective area of all of the faces and bases of a three-dimensional
shape. Surface area can be determined with formulas or by breaking the
prism down into the sum of its two-dimensional components.
14
Surface Area of
Prisms
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Surface Area of a Rectangular Prism
A prism has six faces; each face is a rectangle. For every side or face you see,
there is a congruent side you cannot see.
If you pull each face apart, you will see pairs of congruent rectangles.
The surface area of a prism is the sum of the areas of its face areas, or
SA = 2(length width) + 2(width height) + 2(length height). This for-
mula simplies into:
SA = 2(lw + wh + lh)
disassemble
5 ft. 5 ft.
5 ft.
6 ft.
1 ft.
6 ft. 6 ft.
1 ft. 1 ft.
6 ft.
5 ft.
1 ft.
1 ft.
Side
A
a
Side
C
c
Side
B
b
Side
A
Side
B
Side
C
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Surface Area of a Cube
Like the rectangular prism, a cube has six faces; each face is a congruent
square.
The surface area of a cube is the sum of its face areas, or SA = 6(length
width). This formula simplies into: SA = 6e
2
, where e is the measurement
of the edge of the cube, or length of one side.
Surface Area of Other Types of Prisms
What about calculating the surface area of three-dimensional prisms that
arent cubes or rectangular prisms? Whether you are dealing with a trian-
gular prism, a pentagonal prism or any other n-sided style of prism, you can
always calculate the surface area in parts and then add them together.
Remember, every prism is made up of two congruent faces connected by
parallelograms. Since you know how to calculate the areas of those shapes,
you have the skills to nd the surface area of a number of complex prisms.
Here are examples of a triangular prism and of a pentagonal prism.
disassemble
3 feet
3 feet
3 ft.
3 ft.
3 ft.
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Set 68
Choose the best answer.
323. A rectangular prism has
a. one set of congruent sides.
b. two pairs of congruent sides.
c. three pairs of congruent sides.
d. four pairs of congruent sides.
324. A cube with sides of length x centimeters has a surface area of 6x
2
cm
2
. If the length of each side of the cube is tripled, what will the
surface area be of the resulting cube?
a. 9x
2
cm
2
b. 72x
2
cm
2
c. 18x
2
cm
2
d. 216x
6
cm
2
Set 69
Find the surface area.
325. Mark plays a joke on Tom. He removes the bottom from a box of
bookmarks. When Tom lifts the box, all the bookmarks fall out.
What is the surface area of the empty box Tom is holding if the
box measures 5.2 inches long by 17.6 inches high and 3.7 inches
deep?
326. Marvin wrapped a gift in a box, which is a perfect cube with sides
that each measured d inches. Maya arrives with a gift that is also in
a box that is a perfect cube, but the edge length of each side of her
gift is twice as long as Marvins gift. How many square inches of
wrapping paper, in terms of d, will Maya need to wrap her gift?
a. 6d
2
b. 12d
2
c. 24d
2
d. 2d
3
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177
327. Jimmy gives his father the measurements of a table he wants built.
If the drawing below represents that table, how much veneer does
Jimmys father need to buy in order to cover all the exterior
surfaces of his sons table? (Include the bottom of the table and the
bottom of the legs.)
328. In April or May, Victoria will take a troupe of Girl Scouts camping
in Oregon. Since there is a good chance that the weather will be
wet and rainy, Victoria wants to coat the groups tent with a
waterproof liquid coating. One bottle of waterproof coating will
cover 100 square feet of fabric. The tent that Victoria is bringing is
a triangular prism that is 14 feet long, with a triangular entryway
that is 8 feet wide and 5 feet tall. If she wants to coat all of the
surfaces, including the bottom, how many bottles of waterproof
coating should Victoria buy?
8 ft.
14 ft.
5 ft.
1 foot
7 feet
15 feet
2 feet
2 feet
2 feet
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329. Sarah cuts three identical blocks of wood and joins them end-to-
end. How much exposed surface area remains (round up to the
nearest tenth)?
Set 70
Find each value of x using the gures and information below.
330. Surface Area = 304 square feet
331. Surface Area = 936 square meters
4x
4.5x
4x
x
2x
12x
Block
3
Block
1
B
l
o
c
k
2
8.3 in.
4.0 in.
1.7 in.
SA Block
1
> SA Block
2
> SA Block
3
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179
332. Surface Area = 720 square yards
cube
1
cube
2
3x
3x
3x
cube
2
cube
1
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Answers
Set 68
323. c. When the faces of a rectangular prism are laid side-by-side, you
always have three pairs of congruent faces. That means every face
of the prism (and there are six faces) has one other face that shares
its shape, size, and area.
324. b. The original cube has a side length of x, so after it is tripled, the
side length will by 3x. A cube with a side length of 3x will have six
faces that each have an area of 9x
2
. Therefore the surface area will
be 6(9x
2
) cm
2
= 72x
2
cm
2
. (Although it is tempting to just triple 6x
2
cm2 to 18x
2
cm
2
, that will not work because it does not take into
consideration that each side length has tripled.)
Set 69
325. Surface Area = 260.24 square inches. Begin by nding the whole
surface area: surface area = (SA = 2[(17)(5.2) + (5.2)(3.7) + (17.6)(3.7)
= 351.76 in
2
.) From the total surface area, subtract the area of the
missing face: Remaining SA = 351.76 sq. in. 91.52 sq. in.
Remaining SA = 260.24 square inches.
326. c. The surface area of Marvins gift is 6d
2
. Although it is tempting
to just double 6d
2
to 12d
2
, that will not work because it doesnt
take into consideration that each side length has doubled. Instead
you must consider Mayas gift that has an edge length of 2d, which
will in turn have 6 faces that are each 4d
2
in area. The total surface
area of Mayas gift will be 6 4d
2
= 24d
2
.
327. Surface Area = 318 feet
2
. These next few problems are tricky:
Carefully look at the diagram. Notice that the top of each cubed
leg is not an exposed surface area, nor is the space they occupy
under the large rectangular prism. Lets nd these surface areas
rst. The top of each cubed leg equals the square of the length of
the cube: (2 feet) = 4 sq. ft. There are four congruent cubes, four
congruent faces: 4 4 sq. ft. = 16 sq. ft. It is reasonable to assume
that where the cubes meet the rectangular prism, an equal amount
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181
of area from the prism is also not exposed. Total area concealed =
16 sq. ft + 16 sq. ft. = 32 sq. ft. Now nd the total surface area of
the tables individual parts.
SA of one cube = 6(2 feet)
2
= 6(4 sq. ft.) = 24 sq. ft.
SA of four congruent cubes = 4 24 sq. ft. = 96 sq. ft.
SA of one rectangular prism = 2(15 ft.(7 ft.) + 7 ft.(1 foot) + 15
ft.(1 foot)) = 2(105 sq. ft. + 7 sq. ft. + 15 sq. ft.) = 2(127 sq. ft.) =
254 sq. ft.
Total SA = 96 sq. ft. + 254 sq. ft. = 350 sq. ft.
Finally, subtract the concealed surface area from the total
surface area = 350 sq. ft. 32 sq. ft = 318 sq. ft.
328. 4 bottles. Since this is a triangular prism, break it into it individual
parts. First calculate the area of the triangular face, or door of the
tent. A =
1
2
(b)(h) =
1
2
(8)(5) = 20 ft
2
. Since there are triangular doors
at the front and the back, double this to get 40 ft
2
. Next, the
bottom of the tent will be a rectangle that is 8 feet by 14 feet, so A
= (w)(l) = (8)(14) = 112 ft
2
. The two remaining sides are a little
trickier because the Pythagorean theorem will be needed to solve
for the width or hypotenuse of the front triangular face: a
2
+ b
2
=
c
2
, 4
2
+ 5
2
= 16 + 25 = 41 = c
2
, so c = 6.4 feet. Use this as the width
of the two slanting sides of the tent that have a length of 14. A =
(w)(l) = (6.4)(14) = 89.6 ft2. Since there are two of these sides,
double 89.6ft
2
to get 179.2 ft
2
as the surface area for the two
slanted sides of the tent. Add all of the subtotals together to get:
40ft
2
+ 112ft
2
+ 179.2 ft
2
= 331.2 ft
2
. Since each bottle of
waterproof coating will just cover 100 square feet, Victoria will
need to buy 4 bottles.
329. Surface Area = 297.5 sq. in. The three blocks are congruent; nd
the surface area of one block and multiply it by three: SA = 2(8.3
in.(4.0 in.) + 4.0 in.(1.7 in.) + 8.3 in.(1.7 in.) = 2(33.2 sq. in. + 6.8
sq. in. + 14.11 sq. in.) = 2(54.11 sq. in.) = 108.22 sq. in. 108.22 sq.
in. 3 = 324.66 sq. in. Look at the diagram: The ends of the
middle block are concealed, and they conceal an equal amount of
space on the other two blocks where they are joined: 2 2(4.0 in.
(1.7 in.) = 27.2 sq. in. Subtract the concealed surface area from
the total surface area: 324.66 sq. in. 27.2 sq. in. = 297.46 sq. in.
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Set 70
330. x = 2 feet. Plug the variables into the formula for the SA of a
prism: 304 sq. ft. = 2(12x(2x) + 2x(x) + 12x(x)). 304 sq. ft. = 2(24 x
2
+ 2x
2
+ 12x
2
). 304 sq. ft. = 2(38x
2
). 304 sq. ft. = 76x
2
. 4 sq. ft. = x
2
.
2 feet = x.
331. x = 3 meters. Plug the variables into the formula for the SA of a
prism: 936 square meters = 2(4.5x(4x) + 4x(4x) + 4.5x(4x)). 936 sq.
meters = 2(18x
2
+ 16x
2
+ 18x
2
). 936 sq. meters = 2(52x
2
). 936 sq.
meters = 104x
2
. 9 sq. meters = x
2
. 3 meters = x.
332. x = 22 yards. To nd the surface area of the gure, rst nd the
area of one cube face. A = (b)(h), so area of one face = (3x)(3x) =
9x
2
. There are 10 cube faces in total showing in this gure, so the
total surface area = (10)(9x
2
) = 90x
2
. Given that SA = 720, solve to
nd x.
720 = 90x
2
8 = x
2
x = 22 yards
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Is the cup half empty or half full? In geometry, it is neither half empty,
nor half full; it is half the volume.
Volume is the three-dimensional space within a solid three-dimensional
gure. Remember from chapter 14 that surface area denes the outer planes
of a three-dimensional object. Everything within that object is volume. Vol-
ume is what is inside the shapes you see.
the V =
surface area:
the paper it takes
to cover a cube
volume:
the liquid it takes to
fill that same cube
15
Volume of Prisms
and Pyramids
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Types of Prisms
You investigated rectangular and cubic prisms, among others, in the last
chapter. All the three-dimensional polygons you studied in chapter 14 are
known as right prisms. The sides of a right prismperpendicularly meet the
base to form a 90 angle. Remember that the base is the polygon that
denes the shape of the solid.
The Volume of a Right Prism
Given any right prism, if you can calculate the area of one of its congruent
bases, then multiply that area by the height of the prism, you will nd its
volume. In the following gure, the shaded triangular base on the right side
of the prism has an area of
1
2
(9)(12) = 54 cm
2
. If this area is multiplied by
the height of the prism, which is the 18 cm edge, then that will yield a
total volume of 972 cm
3
. This method can be used with any right prism.
18 cm
12 cm
Volume = (area of triangular base) (height)
V = [( ) (9)(12)] (18)
V = 54 cm
3
9 cm
base base base
Right Triangular
Prism
Right Rectangular
Prism
Right Pentagonal
Prism
184
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185
Rectangles and cubes have special formulas that can be shortcuts:
Volume of a right rectangular prism = (length) (width) (height) = lwh
Volume of a right cube = s
3
or e
3
(where s or e equals the side length)
l = w = h = s = e
(where s equals side and e equals edge)
Volume of other right prisms = (area of base) (height)
Area
of Base
1
h
e
ig
h
t
h
w
l
h
e
i
g
h
t
w
l
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The sides of an oblique prism do not meet the base at a 90 angle.
Again, that base can be any polygon.
The most common oblique prism is the pyramid. A pyramid is a three-
dimensional shape with a regular polygon base and congruent triangular
sides that meet at a common point. Pyramids are named by the shape of
their bases, as demonstrated in the following three gures:
Triangular
Pyramid
Square
Pyramid
Pentagonal
Pyramid
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187
The Volume of a Pyramid
The volume of a pyramid is a third of the volume of a right prism that
has the same base and height measurements.
The volume of a pyramid =
1
3
(area of its base) (height).
The sum of the volumes of three pyramids with square bases will equal the
volume of a cube that has the same dimensions:
+ +
Volume
Right Prism
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
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Set 71
Choose the best answer.
333. Which gure below is a right prism?
a.
b.
c.
d.
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189
334. Which polygon denes the shape of the right prism below?
a. triangle
b. rectangle
c. quadrilateral
d. pentagon
335. What is the surface area of a cube prism that has a volume of
1,000 in
3
?
a. 10 cm
2
b. 100 cm
2
c. 600 in
2
d. 60 in
2
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336. Which gure below is a right hexagonal prism?
a.
b.
c.
d.
190
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191
337. Samara is packing her books up after a semester at college. Her
roommate gave her an extra box, but it ended up being too small.
She went to the market and bought a box that had the same width,
but was twice as high and three times as long. If the free box from
her roommate only t seven uniformly sized books, how many
books should Samara expect to t in the larger box she is
purchasing if all of her books are about the same size?
a. 6
b. 13
c. 35
d. 42
338. Which gure below has a third of the volume of a 3 in. cube?
a.
b.
c.
d.
1 in.
3 in.
2 in.
1 in.
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339. Miss Sweet has a ower vase that is a regular triangular prism. The
vase is a foot and a half tall and its triangular base is a right triangle
with legs of four inches and six inches. If Miss Sweet will ll the vase
only
3
4
full with water, how many cubic inches of water will it contain?
a. 162 in
3
b. 216 in
3
c. 432 in
3
d. 324 in
3
Set 72
Find the volume of each solid.
340. Find the volume of a right heptagonal prism with base sides that
measure 13 cm, an apothem that measures 6 cm, and a height that
measures 2 cm.
341. Find the volume of a pyramid with four congruent base sides. The
length of each base side and the prisms height measure 2.4 ft.
342. Find the volume of a pyramid with an eight-sided base that
measures 330 sq. in. and a height that measures 10 in.
Set 73
Find each unknown element using the information below.
343. Find the height of a right rectangular prism with a 295.2 cubic in.
volume and a base area that measures 72.0 sq. in.
344. Find the base area of a right nonagon prism with an 8,800 cubic ft.
volume and a height that measures 8.8 ft.
345. Find the area of a triangular pyramids base side if its volume
measures 723 cubic meters and its height measures 6 meters.
192
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193
Set 74
Use the solid gure below to answer questions 346 through 348.
346. What is the sum of all of the edge lengths in this cube?
347. What is the surface area?
348. What is the volume?
Set 75
Use the solid gure below to answer questions 349 through 351.
349. Calculate the width and length of one of the gures biggest sides?
350. What is the height?
351. What is the surface area?
base
1
perimeter of base = 54
volume = 810 in.
3
x
h
l = 2.1 meters
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Answers
Set 71
333. d. Choice a is a hexagonal pyramid; none of its six sides
perpendicularly meets its base. The sides of choice b only
perpendicularly join one base side, and choice c is an oblique
quadrilateral; its base is facing away from you. Choice d is the
correct answer; it is a triangular right prism.
334. d. The solid in the gure has seven sides. Subtract two base sides,
and it has ve sides, one for each edge of a pentagon. You will be
tempted to answer rectangle. Remember all right prisms have
rectangles. It is the polygon at the base of the rectangle that
denes the prisms shape.
335. c. Since the formula for the volume of a right cube = s
3
, then 1,000
= s
3
, and s = 10 in. The surface area of a cube is 6 times (area of one
face). Therefore, the surface area will be 6(10 10) = 600 in
2
.
336. b. A hexagonal prism must have a hexagon as one of its sides. A
right hexagonal prism has two hexagons. Choice a is a pentagonal
right prism; choice c is a decagonal right prism; and choice d is not
a prism at all.
337. d. Assume that the volume of the rst box from Samaras
roommate was lwh. Since the box Samara purchased had the same
width, but was twice as high and three times as long, the new boxs
volume should be expressed as (3l )(w)(2h) = 6lwh. Therefore, the
new box has a volume that is six times bigger and it should hold six
times as many books. 7 6 = 42.
338. c. Again, you are looking for a pyramid with the same base
measurements of the given cube. A 3-inch cube has a volume of
27 in
3
. Twenty-seven choice as can t into the given cube; meanwhile,
eighty-one choice ds t into that same cube. Only three choice cs
t into the given cube; it has one-third the volume.
194
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195
339. a. Since the triangular base of the vase is a right triangle with legs
of 4 and 6 inches, the area of this triangular base is A =
1
2
(b)(h) =
(
1
2
)(4)(6) = 12 in
2
. The vase is a foot and a half tall, which means it
is 18 inches tall. The total volume of water that the vase can hold is
V = 12 18 = 216 in
3
. Since Miss Sweet is only going to ll it
3
4
1
3
(13.824 cubic ft.) = 4.608 cubic ft.
342. Volume = 1,100 cubic inches. Unlike the example above, this
pyramid has an octagonal base. However, it is still a third of a right
octagonal prism with the same base measurements, or
1
3
(area of its
base height). Conveniently, the area of the base has been given to
you: area of octagonal base = 330 square inches. Volume of octagonal
pyramid =
1
3
(330 sq. in) 10 in. =
1
3
(3,300 cubic in.) = 1,100 cubic in.
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Set 73
343. Height = 4.1 inches. Backsolve by plugging the numbers you are
given into the formula for volume of a right rectangular prism.
V = l wh
295.2 = (l )(w)(h)
You know from chapter 13, page 155, that the area of a rectangle is
length times width. So let the given area of 72.0 square inches take
the place of l and w so you can solve for h.
295.2 = 72.0 sq. in. h
4.1 in = h
344. Area = 1,000 square feet. Dont let the type of prism, nonagon,
fool you. As long as its a right prism, you can use the formula
V = (area of base)(height) to help you. In this question, backsolve
to nd the area of the base.
8,800 cubic ft. = (b)(8.8 ft)
1,000 sq. ft. = b
345. Area = 363 = 62.4m
2
. If the volume of a triangular pyramid is
723 cubic meters, work backwards to nd the area of its
triangular base and then the length of a side of that base
(remember, you are working with regular polygons, so the base
will be an equilateral triangle). 723 cubic meters =
1
3
area of base
6 meters. 723 cubic meters = a 2 meters. 363 square
meters = a.
Set 74
346. 25.2 meters. The perimeter of the front face and back face
combined will be double the perimeter of the front face:
P = 4(2.1) = 8.4, which yields 16.8 meters when doubled. Then
there are 4 more edges that are each 2.1 meters long, which sum
to 8.4 meters. Together, all these edge lengths sum to 25.2 meters.
196
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197
347. Surface area = 26.5 square meters. The surface area of a cube is
the area of one face multiplied by the number of faces, or SA = 6bh.
SA = 6(2.1 meters)
2
. SA = 6(4.41 square meters).
SA = 26.46 square meters.
348. Volume = 9.3 cubic meters. The volume of a cube is its length
multiplied by its width multiplied by its height, or V = e
2
(e
represents one edge of a cube). V = 2.1 meters 2.1 meters 2.1
meters. V = 9.261 cubic meters.
Set 75
349. Length = 18 inches; width = 9 inches. Plug the given variables
and perimeter into the formula p = l + w + l + w. 54 in. = 2x + x +
2x + x. 54 in. = 6x. 9 inches = x.
350. Height = 5 inches. By now, you remember the formula for a
rectangular prism: V = lwh. You solved for l and w in question 349
and the volume is given. Backsolve by plugging those numbers into
the formula to solve for h.
810 in
3
= (18)(9)(h)
810 in
3
= (162 in
2
)(h)
5 inches = h
351. Surface area = 594 square inches. As we learned in chapter 14, the
surface area of a prism is a sum of areas, or SA = 2(lw + wh + lh).
Plug the measurements you found in the previous questions into
this formula. SA = 2(18 in. 9 in.) + (9 in. 5 in.) + (18 in. 5 in.).
SA = 2(162 sq. in. + 45 sq. in. + 90 sq. in.). SA = 2(297 sq. in.).
SA = 594 square inches.
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Of course you know what a circle looks like, but do you know how it is
dened? A circle is a collection of points that are an equal distance from
one center point. Since circles do not have any corners or vertex points that
dene their dimensions, there are special formulas, and a special ratio called
pi (), that are used when calculating perimeter, area, and volume in circles
and spheres.
16
Introduction to
Circles and Arcs
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Center Point, Radius, Central Angle
The center point in a circle is called just that: the center! The center point
is what is used to name the circle. The following circle would be called cir-
cle C or C. The distance from the center of the circle to any point on the
edge of the circle is called the radius of the circle. The radius is the den-
ing element of a circle, determining how big it is. A circle has an innite
number of radii, which are all the same length (radii is the plural of
radius). If two circles share the same center, but have radii of different
lengths, then the circles are concentric. Below, there are two concentric
circles, named C. The smaller one has radius CA
. Notice that the two additional radii drawn into the smaller cir-
cle are equal in length to radius CA
.
Chords and Diameters
A chord is a line segment that joins two points on a circle. On the fol-
lowing page, AC
is a chord.
A diameter is a chord that joins two points on a circle and passes through
the center point. DB
is a diameter of O.
Note: A diameter is twice the length of a radius, and a radius is half the
length of a diameter.
C
A
B
200
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201
Degrees and Arcs in Circle
Like polygons, circles contain degrees. A complete rotation around a cir-
cle contains 360. A semicircle is half of a circle; it contains 180. Any two
radii in a circle form a central angle that will measure between 0 and 360.
In the gure below AOB is a central angle.
Two radii will also form an arc on the outside of the circle. Arcs formed
by central angles always have the same measurement as the central angle.
Arc AB in the circle pictured is written
AB.
A minor arc is any arc that measures less than 180.
AB is a minor arc
measuring 33. A major arc is any arc that measures more than 180. To
name a major arc, you must include an additional letter existing on the
perimeter of the circle, that is not a part of the minor arc. For example
ADB or
ACB are both ways to name the major arc measuring 327.
A
B
C
D
O
33
3
2
7
d
i
a
m
e
t
e
r
r
a
d
i
u
s
AOB = 33
AB = 33
AOB = AB
AB is a minor arc
ABC is a semicircle
ABD is a major arc
m
a
j
o
r
a
r
c
m
i
n
o
r
a
r
c
A
B
C
D
O
d
i
a
m
e
t
e
r
OB and OD are each a radius
of O.
DB is a diameter
AC is a chord
OB > OD
2 OB = DB
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Congruent Arcs and Circles
Congruent circles have congruent radii and diameters. Congruent central
angles form congruent arcs in congruent circles.
Tangent and Secant Lines in Circles
A tangent is a ray or line segment that intercepts a circle at exactly one
point. The angle formed by a radius and a tangent where it meets a circle
is always right angle.
Note: Two tangents from the same exterior point are congruent.
A secant is a ray or line segment that intercepts a circle at two points.
A
B
D
C R O RB RD
OB OD
secant
t
a
n
g
e
n
t
202
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203
Set 76
Choose the best answer.
352. Which statement accurately describes what is illustrated
in circle W?
a. KWI forms major arc
KI
b. y forms minor arc
KI
c. x forms major arc
KI
d. y forms major arc
KAI
353. In a circle, a radius
a. is the same length of a radius in a congruent circle.
b. extends outside the circle.
c. is twice the length of a diameter.
d. determines an arc.
354. Congruent circles
a. have the same center point.
b. have diameters of the same length.
c. have radii of the same length.
d. b and c
W
x
y
A
I
K
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Use the gure below to answer question 355.
355. If the diameter of circle A is 9 cm, what is the length of CS
?
a. 27 cm
b. 4.5 cm
c. 22.5 cm
d. 18 cm
356. A lies 12 inches from the center of P. If P has a 1-foot radius.
A lies
a. inside the circle.
b. on the circle.
c. outside the circle.
d. between concentric circles.
357. A diameter is also
a. a radius.
b. an arc.
c. a chord.
d. a line.
A R G O
S
C
204
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205
358. Both tangents and radii
a. extend from the center of a circle.
b. are half a circles length.
c. meet a circle at exactly one point.
d. are straight angles.
359. From a stationary point, Billy throws four balls in four directions.
Where each ball lands determines the endpoint for a radius of a
new circle. What do the four circles have in common?
a. a center point
b. a radius
c. a diameter
d. a tangent
360. Fernando has three goats, Izzy, Eli, and Pat. He keeps them in a
eld, each on a leash that is tethered to a stake in the ground in a
straight line, so that each goat has its own circular grazing area for
the day. Izzys leash is 40 feet long, Elis leash is 30 feet long, and
Pat is just a few months old, with a 20-foot leash. If Fernando
doesnt want any the goats to be able to get any closer than 15 feet
to each other, what is the minimum amount of horizontal length of
eld needed for these three goats?
a. 210 feet
b. 120 feet
c. 135 feet
d. 225 feet
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Set 77
Use the gure below to answer question 361.
361. The above gure is not drawn to scale. Use your knowledge of
tangents to nd the value of x.
Use the gure below to answer question 362.
362. If the diameter of M is 2 inches, then what is the radius of P?
2 inches
Given
OM QO
PO QP
M
O
P
Q
C
B
A
4
3
F E
D
15
x
206
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207
Use the gure below to answer question 363.
363. Which circle is NOT congruent to the other circles?
A
C
7
74
D
2.5
18.75
10
2
B
1
24
w
w
w
10
w
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Use the gures below to answer question 364.
364. In which gure (L, N, P, O) is the set of arcs not congruent?
L. P.
B A
C
D
A
B
C
D
O. N.
A
B
A
D
C
B
AB CD
AB BA
AB CD
AB CD
208
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209
Use the gure below to answer questions 365 through 367.
365. What is the length of a radius in the circle?
366. What is the area of DEF?
367. What are the names of the minor arc and major arc in circle F?
D
E
G F
H
25
20
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Answers
Set 76
352. d. Major arcs always need a third letter to distinguish them from
the minor arc that has the same endpoints. y forms major arc
KAI .
353. a. A circle is a set of points equidistant from a center point.
Congruent circles have points that lie the same distance from two
different center points. Consequently, the radii (the line segments
that connect the center point to the points on a circle) of
congruent circles are congruent. Choices b and c are incorrect
because they describe secants. Choice d describes a chord.
354. d. Congruent circles have congruent radii; if their radii are
congruent, then their diameters are also congruent. Choice a
describes concentric circles, not congruent circles.
355. c. Since all of these circles share a radius, they are all congruent
with a radius that is half of the 9 cm diameter of circle A. There
are ve radii, each measuring 4.5 cm, from point C to point S,
which means that CS
is congruent to AB
, EF
is congruent to ED
,
CB
is congruent to CD
, AB
is 4, and DE
is the difference of CE
and CD
: a
2
+ 20
2
= 25
2
.
a
2
+ 400 = 625. a
2
= 225. a = 15.
366. Area = 150 in
3
.The length of ED
1
2
bh:
1
2
1
2
(300 in.
2
) =150 square inches.
367.
DG and
DHG.
212
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The Importance of in Circles
The irrational number (which is spelled pi and pronounced
pie), is a key concept when working with circles. Pi is essential to calcu-
lating the area of circles as well as the circumferencethe perimeter
around the outsideof a circle. Over 2,000 years ago Greek mathemati-
cians discovered that is actually the never-changing quotient of the
cir
d
c
i
u
a
m
m
f
e
e
t
r
e
e
r
nce
=
1
12
So AC = 14 =
1
12
7
6
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Area of a Circle
Pi is also essential when calculating the area of a circle. Unlike with cir-
cumference, only the radius can be used to calculate area. This means if you
are given the diameter of a circle, you will need to divide it by two to get
the radius before nding the area. Area = r
2
A = r
2
A = (7 inches)
2
A = 49 square inches
A
B
7
in
.
216
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217
Set 78
Choose the best answer.
368. What is the circumference of the gure below?
a. 57 inches
b. 114 inches
c. 26.5 inches
d. 57 inches
369. What is the area of the gure below?
a. 51.5 square feet
b. 103 square feet
c. 206 square feet
d. 10,609 square feet
M
N
O
2
0
6
fe
e
t
A
57
O
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370. If ME
b. 20x
2
c. 100x
2
d. 100x
371. The area of a square is 484 square feet. What is the maximum area
of a circle inscribed in the square (where the diameter of the circle
= the length of one square side)?
a. 11 square feet
b. 22 square feet
c. 484 square feet
d. 122 square feet
372. If the circumference of a circle is 192 feet, then the length of the
circles radius is
a. 166 feet.
b. 96 feet.
c. 192 feet.
d. 384 feet.
373. If the area of a circle is 289 square feet, then the length of the
circles radius is
a. 17 feet.
b. 34 feet.
c. 144.5 feet.
d. 289 feet.
M
E
A
218
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219
374. What is the area of a circle inscribed in a dodecagon with an
apothem 13 meters long?
a. 26 square meters
b. 156 square meters
c. 42.2 square meters
d. 169 square meters
Use the gure below to answer questions 375 through 376. It is NOT
drawn to scale
375.
BD is a quarter of the circumference of A. If the total
circumference of A is 64 feet, then what is the length of
BD?
a. 16 feet
b. 32 feet
c. 48 feet
d. 90 feet
376. What is the central angle, BAD that intercepts
BD?
a. an acute angle
b. a right angle
c. an obtuse angle
d. a straight angle
B
D
A
C = 64
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Use the gure below to answer question 377.
377. What is the area of all of the shaded regions in the gure.
a. 144 square feet 12 square feet
b. 12 square feet 144 square feet
c. 144 square feet
d. 144 square feet 24 square feet + 12 square feet
Set 79
Use the gure below to answer questions 378 through 379.
K
L 15H
M 15H
12 feet
6 feet
6 feet
A
D
B
C
AB BC CD DA
220
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221
378. What is the area of the shaded regions in the gure?
a. 56.25 square feet
b. 112.5 square feet
c. 225 square feet
d. 337.4 square feet
379. What is the ratio of the area of M and the area of K?
a. 1:8
b. 1:4
c. 1:2
d. 1:1
Use the gure below to answer questions 380 through 381.
380. If AB
= 60 and OB
and OC
?
382. Continuing with the information that AOC measures 60, what
is the area of the shaded region of the gure?
C
B
A
O
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Using the gure below answer questions 383 through 387.
383. An outer ring exists outside of the circle that has a radius of OA
,
but inside the circle that has a radius of OC
AB.
386. Find the length of
CD.
387. Although they are dened by the same angle, what is the
relationship between the lengths of arcs
CD and
AB? What
does this tell you about how arc length relates to angle size
and radius length?
A
C
D B
7.0 in.
45
O
7.0 in.
222
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223
Set 80
Use the gure below to answer questions 388 through 389.
388. What is the area of trapezoid ABDE?
389. What is the area of the shaded region?
F
G
A
B
C
D
E
4 feet
6 feet
42 feet
AB BF FD DE
height of BCD = 6 ft.
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Answers
Set 78
368. b. The perimeter of a circle is twice the radius times pi: (2 57
inches).
369. d. You rst need to divide the given diameter of 206 feet, in two in
order to nd the radius. The area of a circle is the radius squared
times pi: (103 feet)
2
.
370. a. Follow the same rst step as you did in question 369. Since
ME
371. c. If the area of a square is 484 square feet, then the sides of the
square must measure 22 feet each. The diameter of an inscribed
circle has the same length as one side of the square. The maximum
area of an inscribed circle is (11 feet)
2
, or 121 square feet.
372. b. Backsolve by plugging the given circumference, 192 feet, into
the formula for circumference of a circle. The circumference of a
circle is pi times twice the radius. 192 feet is twice the length of the
radius; therefore half of 192 feet, or 96 feet, is the actual length of
the radius.
373. a. Just as in question 372, backsolve by plugging 289 into the
formula for area. The area of a circle is pi times the square of its
radius. If 289 feet is the square of the circles radius, then 17 feet is
the length of its radius. Choice c is not the answer because 144.5 is
half of 289, not the square root of 289.
374. d. Have you forgotten these terms? Look back to chapter 13 on
polygons for a refresher. In the mean time, dont get too distracted
by the shape of the polygon, in this case a dodecagon. Hold fast to
two factsthe circle is set within the dodecagon and the apothem
goes to the dodecagons center. Therefore, the center of the circle
overlaps with the center of the dodecagon and, accordingly, the
apothem = the radius. From here, solve for area. A = r
2
. A = (13)
2
.
A = 169 square meters.
224
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225
375. a. The length of arc BD is a quarter of the circumference of A,
or 16 feet.
376. b. A quarter of 360 is 90; BAD is a right angle.
377. c. This question is much simpler than it seems. The half circles
that cap square ABCD form the same area as the circular void in
the center. Find the area of square ABCD, and that is your answer.
12 feet 12 feet = 144 feet. Choice a and d are the same answer.
Choice b is a negative area and is incorrect.
Set 79
378. b. The radii of L and M are half the radius of K. Their areas
equal (7.5 feet)
2
, or 56.25 square feet each. The area of K is
(15
2
), or 225 square feet. Subtract the areas of circles L and M
from the area of K: 225 sq. ft. 112.5 sq. ft. = 112.5 square
feet.
379. b. A ratio is a comparison of two quantities, as discussed in chapter
8. Youll need to compare the values for area you found in question
378. Though M has half the radius of K, it has a fourth of the
area of K. 56.25 square feet: 225.0 square feet, or 1:4.
380. Area = 2,025 square feet. You will need to use your mastery of the
Pythagorean theorem to solve for leg OA
and OC
w
p
h
a
o
r
l
t
e
=
3
6
6
0
0
=
par
2
t
0
ia
2
l
5
a
rea
=
1
8
, multiply 147 by
1
8
to get 18.4 in
2
.
385. 1.75 inches. The circumference of small O is 14 inches. A 45
slice of that circumference is one-eighth the circumference, or
1.75 inches.
386. 3.5 inches. The circumference of concentric O is 28 inches.
An eighth of that circumference is 3.5 inches.
387. Arc
AB.
This shows that just because two arcs are dened by the same
angle, they will not necessarily have the same arc length. If the
angle measurement is the same, the bigger the radius of the circle,
the bigger the arc length.
Set 80
388. Area = 48 square feet. Use the Pythagorean theorem to nd AG
.
(42)
2
= (4)
2
+ b
2
. 32 = 16 + b
2
. b = 4. If AG
, EF
and BD
1
2
of its bases:
1
2
(4 ft.)(8 ft.
+ 16 ft.) = 2(24) = 48 square feet.
226
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227
389. Area 14.88 square feet. The shaded area is the difference of
BCDs area and the area between chord BD and arc BD. The
height of BCD is 6 feet. Its area is
1
2
1
3
(r
2
)(h)
Spheres
A sphere is a set of points equidistant from one central point. This is the
mathematical denition for the shape of a basketball! Spheres are only
measured by the length of their radii; they do not have a separate height like
cylinders and cones.
The surface area of a Sphere is: SA = 4r
2
The surface area of a sphere is four times the area of a circle.
The volume of a Sphere is: V =
4
3
r
3
230
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231
Set 81
Use the gure below to answer questions 390 through 392.
390. If the volume of the cylinder P is 432 cubic feet, what is the
length of x?
391. What is the surface area of cylinder P?
392. What is the total combined volume of the cylinder and the three
pictured cones?
12 ft.
P
12 ft.
x
x
x
x
Volume of cylinder P = 432 cubic ft.
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Set 82
Use the gure below to answer questions 393 through 395.
393. If the volume of the spherical part of candy wrapper Q is
1
6
cubic
inches, what is the length of x?
394. If the conical ends of candy wrapper Q have
9
1
6
cubic inch
volumes each, what is the length of y?
395. What is the surface area of the gumball inside the wrapper?
Set 83
Solve each question using the information in each word problem.
396. Tracy and Jarret try to share an ice cream cone, but Tracy wants
half of the scoop of ice cream on top while Jarret wants the ice
cream inside the cone. Assuming the half scoop of ice cream on
top is part of a perfect sphere, who will have more ice cream? The
cone and scoop both have radii 1 inch long; the cone is 3 inches
high. Assume the cone is lled with ice cream.
397. Dillon lls the cylindrical coffee grind containers each day. One
bag has 32 cubic inches of grinds. How many cylindrical
x
y
inch
Q
Volume Q = cubic inches
232
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233
containers can Dillon ll with two bags of grinds if each cylinder is
4 inches wide and 4 inches high?
398. Jaap is making all of the table arrangements for Christines
wedding. She has chosen a design that places an 18-inch tall
cylindrical vase with a diameter of 6 inches into another 18-inch
tall cylindrical vase that has an eight-inch diameter. Sea grasses and
owers will be put into the inner vase and the gap between the two
vases will be lled with sand. If Christine will have 12 tables at her
wedding, how many cubic inches of sand does Jaap need to purchase
to complete this order? (Keep your answer in form.)
399. A farm in the Midwest has a grain silo that is a round cylinder with
half of a dome on top. The height of the silo from the ground to
the top of the dome is 22 meters. The width of the bottom of the
silo is six meters. What is the total volume of the silo? (Keep your
answer in form.)
400. Munine is trying to t her new 24-inch tall cylindrical speakers in
a corner shelf. Unfortunately, they do not t upright in her shelf. If
each speaker is 2,400 cubic inches, what is the maximum width of
her shelf.
401. Tory knows that the space in a local cathedral dome is 13,122
cubic feet. Using her knowledge of geometry, what does Tory
calculate the height of the dome to be?
Set 84
402. In art class, Billy adheres 32 identical half spheres to cover with
canvas. What is their total surface area, not including the at side
adhered to the canvas, if the radius of one sphere is 8 centimeters?
403. Joe carves a perfect 3.0-meter wide sphere inside a right prism. If
the volume of the prism is 250.0 cubic meters, how much material
did he remove? How much material remains?
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404. Theoretically, how many spherical shaped candies should t into a
cylindrical jar if the diameter of each candy is 0.50 inch, and the jar
is 4.50 inches wide and 6 inches long?
405. A sphere with a 2-foot radius rests inside a cube with edges 4.5 feet
long. What is the volume of the space between the sphere and the
cube assuming pi 3.14?
Set 85
Use Puppet Dan to answer questions 406 through 414.
2 inches
4 inches
6 inches
6 inches
1 inch
2 inches
2 inches
2 inches
2 inches
3 inches
3 inches
6 inches
5 inches
6 inches
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235
406. What is the volume of Puppet Dans hat if it measures 6 inches
wide by 6 inches high?
407. What is the volume of Puppet Dans head if it measures 6 inches
wide?
408. What is the volume of Puppet Dans arms if one segment measures
2 inches wide by 4 inches long?
409. What is the volume of Puppet Dans hands if each one measures
2 inches wide?
410. What is the volume of Puppet Dans body if it measures 6 inches
wide and 6 inches long? Each end of the cylinder measures 6
inches wide.
411. What is the volume of Puppet Dans legs if each segment measures
2 inches wide by 5 inches long?
412. What is the volume of Puppet Dans feet if each foot measures
2 inches 2 inches 1 inch?
413. What is puppet Dans total volume?
414. Puppet Dan is made out of foam. If foam weighs 3 ounces per
cubic inch, how much does the total of puppet Dans parts weigh?
501 Geometry Questions
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Answers
Set 81
390. x = 6 feet. The radius of cylinder P is represented by x ; it is the
only missing variable in the volume formula. Plug it in and solve
for x: 432 cubic ft. = (x
2
)12 ft. 36 sq. ft. = x
2
. 6 feet = x.
391. Surface area = 216 square feet. The surface area of a cylinder is
2r
2
+ 2rh: Plug the variables in and solve: SA = 2(6 ft)
2
+ 2(6
ft. 12 ft.). 72 sq. ft.+ 144 sq. ft. = 216 sq. ft.
392. Total volume = 864 cubic feet. This problem is easier than
you think. Each cone has exactly the same volume. The three
cones together equal the volume of the cylinder because a cone
has
1
3
the volume of a cylinder with the same height and radius.
Multiply the volume of the cylinder by 2, and you have the
combined volume of all three cones and the cylinder.
Set 82
393. x =
1
2
1
6
= x
3
.
1
6
= x
3
.
1
2
= x.
394. y =
1
4
inch. The volume of a cone is
1
3
r
2
h, where y is the value of
r. Plug in the variables and solve:
9
1
6
cubic in. =
1
3
y
2
1
2
in.
9
1
6
cubic in. =
1
6
y
2
.
1
1
6
sq. in. = y
2
.
1
4
inch = y.
395. Surface area = 1.0 square inch. The candy inside the wrapper is
a perfect sphere. The formula for its surface area is 4r
2
. Plug the
variables in and solve: SA = 4(0.5 inch)
2
. SA = 1.0 square inch.
Set 83
396. Jarret. The volume of a half sphere is
1
2
(
4
3
r
3
). Tracys half scoop is
then
1
2
(
4
3
1 inch
3
), or
2
3
cubic inches. The volume of a cone is
1
3
r
2
h. The ice cream in the cone is
1
3
(1 inch
2
3 inches), or
cubic inches. Jarret has
1
3
cubic inches more ice cream than Tracy.
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237
397. 4 containers. Remember that the given measurement of 4 inches
wide is equal to the diameter of the cylinder. You need to take half
this measurement in order to determine the radius. The volume of
each container is (2 in.)
2
(4 in.), or 16 cubic inches. One bag lls
the volume of two containers. Two bags will ll the volume of four
containers.
398. 1,512 in
3
. First nd the volume of the larger vase, using a radius
of 4: V = (4
2
)(18) = 288 in
3
. Next nd the volume of the smaller
vase, using a radius of 3: V = (3
2
)(18) = 162 in
3
. Subtract these
two volumes to nd the volume of the gap between the vases:
288 162 = 126 in
3
. This is the volume of sand needed for
each vase, so multiplying that by 12 we get 126 12 = 1,512 in
3
.
399. 189 m
2
. Since the base of the cylinder is six meters wide, it has a
radius of three meters. Therefore the dome will extend 3 meters
above the top of the cylindrical base, making height of the
cylindrical base 19 meters. Calculate the volume of a cylinder that
is 19 meters tall with a radius of three meters: V = (3
2
)(19) = 171 m
2
.
Next nd half of the volume of the sphere-shaped dome on top
that has a radius of 3:
1
2
4
3
3
3
) = 18 m
2
. Add these together to nd
the total volume: 171 m
2
+ 18 m
2
= 189 m
2
.
400. Less than 20 inches. The volume of a single speaker is (r
2
24
inches) = 2,400 cubic inches. Now solve for the radius. r
2
= 100
square inches. r = 10 inches. The width of each speaker is twice
the radius, or 20 inches. Munines shelf is less than 20 inches wide.
401. 27 feet. Half the volume of a sphere is
1
2
(
4
3
r
3
), or
2
3
r
3
. If
the volume is 13,122 cubic feet, then the radius is 27 feet
(
3
19,683 = 27). The height of the dome is equal to the radius
of the dome; therefore the height is also 27 feet.
Set 84
402. 4,096 square centimeters. Surface area of a whole sphere is
4r
2
. The surface area of half a sphere is 2r
2
. Each spheres
surface area is 2(8 centimeters
2
), or 128 square centimeters.
Now, multiply the surface area of one half sphere by the 32 halves:
32 128 square centimeters = 4,096 square centimeters.
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403. Approximately 235.9 cubic meters. Joe removed the same
amount of material as volume in the sphere, or
4
3
(1.5 meters)
3
,
which simplies to 4.5 cubic meters. The remaining volume is
250 cubic meters 4.5 cubic meters, or approximately 235.9
cubic meters.
404. 1,518 candies. The volume of each piece of candy is
4
3
(0.25 inches)
3
,
or 0.02 cubic inches. The volume of the jar is (2.25 inches
2
6)
inches, or 30.375 cubic inches. Divide the volume of the jar by
the volume of a candy , and 1,518 candies can theoretically
t into the given jar (not including the space between candies).
405. Remaining volume 57.6 ft. First, nd the volume of the cube,
which is (4.5 feet)
3
, or approximately 91.1 cubic feet. The volume
of the sphere within is only
4
3
(2 feet)
3
, or approximately 33.5
cubic feet. Subtract the volume of the sphere from the volume of
the cube. The remaining volume is approximately 57.6 cubic feet.
Set 85
406. V = 18 cubic inches. Volume of a cone =
1
3
r
2
h.
V =
1
3
(3 in.)
2
(6 in.).
407. V = 36 cubic inches.Volume of a sphere =
4
3
r
3
. V =
4
3
(3 in.)
3
.
408. 16 cubic inches. Volume of a cylinder = r
2
h. V = (1 in.
2
4 in.)
V = 4 cubic inches. There are four arm segments, so four times
the volume = 16 cubic inches.
409.
8
3
4
3
r
3
. V =
4
3
(1 in.
3
). V =
4
3
cubic inches. There are two handballs, so two times the volume =
8
3
cubic inches.
410. 90 cubic inches. The body is the sum of two congruent half
spheres, which is really one sphere, and a cylinder. Volume of a
sphere =
4
3
r
3
. V =
4
3
(3 in.)
3
. V = 36 cubic inches. Volume of a
cylinder = r
2
h. V = (3 in.)
2
(6 in.); V = 54 cubic inches. Total
volume = 90 cubic inches.
30.375 cubic inches
8
3
c
2
= a
2
+ b
2
(Pythagorean theorem)
a = horizontal leg: (x
2
x
1
)
b = vertical leg: (y
2
y
1
)
c = d (the distance between two points)
d = (x
2
x
1
)
2
+ (y
2
y
1
)
2
417. True or False: The distance between two points can always be
counted by hand accurately as long as the points are plotted on
graph paper.
(3,1)
(1,4)
(3,2)
(x
2
, y
2
)
(x
1
, y
1
)
(2,4)
Distance = (x
2
x
1
)
2
+ (y
2
y
1
)
2
D = (3 2)
2
+ (1 4)
2
D = (5)
2
+ (5)
2
D = 25 + 25
D = 50
D 7.1
Pythagorean theorem
a
2
+ b
2
+ c
2
a
2
+ b
2
= c
244
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245
418. A (3,2) lies in quadrant
a. I.
b. II.
c. III.
d. IV.
419. R is 3 spaces right and one space above P (1,2). R lies in
quadrant
a. I.
b. II.
c. III.
d. IV.
420. B is 40 spaces spaces left and 20 spaces below A (20,18). B lies in
quadrant
a. I.
b. II.
c. III.
d. IV.
421. O is 15 spaces right and 15 spaces below N (15,0). O lies on
a. x-axis.
b. y-axis.
c. z-axis.
d. the origin.
422. On a coordinate plane, y = 0 is
a. the x-axis.
b. the y-axis.
c. a solid line.
d. nitely long.
423. A baseball eld is divided into quadrants. The pitcher is the point
of origin. The second baseman and the hitter lie on the y-axis; the
rst baseman and the third baseman lie on the x-axis. If the hitter
bats a ball into the far left eld, the ball lies in quadrant
a. I.
b. II.
c. III.
d. IV.
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424. A (12,3), B (0,3) and C (12,3) form
a. a vertical line
b. a horizontal line
c. a diagonal line
d. a plane
425. G (14,2), H (1,15) and I (3,0)
a. determine a plane.
b. are collinear.
c. are noncoplanar.
d. are a line.
426. The distance between J (4,5) and K (2,0) is
a. 11 .
b. 29 .
c. 61 .
d. 22 .
246
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247
Set 87
State the coordinate pair for each point.
427. A
428. B
429. C
430. D
x
y
C
A
B
D
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Set 88
Plot each point on the same coordinate plane. Remember to label
each point appropriately.
431. From the origin, plot M (4,5).
432. From the origin, plot N (12,1).
433. From the origin, plot O (3,6).
434. From the origin, plot P (0,5)
435. What is the horizontal distance between M and O? What is the
vertical distance?
436. Find the length of MO
.
x
y
248
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249
Set 89
Find the distance between each given pair of points.
437. A (0,4) and B (0,32)
438. C (1,2) and D (4,1)
439. E (3,3) and F (7,3)
440. G (17,0) and H (3,0)
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Answers
Set 86
415. c. The origin, whose coordinate pair is (0,0), is in fact a location. It
is where the x-axis meets the y-axis. It is not the beginning of
either axis because both axes extend innitely in opposite
directions, which means they have no beginning and no end.
416. False: You must nd the sum inside the parentheses before taking
the square root of the terms.
417. False: Unless the coordinate pairs have the same x- or y-
coordinate, the distance between them will be a diagonal line which
cannot be counted by hand.
418. c. Both coordinates are negative: count three spaces left of the
origin; then count two spaces down from the x-axis. A is in
quadrant III.
419. d. To nd a new coordinate pair, add like coordinates: 3 + (1) = 2.
1 + (2) = 1. This new coordinate pair is R (2,1); R lies in
quadrant IV.
420. c. To nd a new coordinate pair, add like coordinates: x will be
(40) + 20 = 20; y will be (20) + 18 = 2. B (20, 2) lies in
Quadrant III.
421. b. To nd a new coordinate pair, add like coordinates: 15 + (15) =
0. (15) + 0 = 15. This new coordinate pair is (0,15); any point
whose x-coordinate is zero resides on the y-axis.
422. a. The y-coordinate of every point on the x-axis is zero.
423. b. Draw a baseball eldits exact shape is irrelevant; only the
alignment of the players matter. They form the axis of the
coordinate plane. The ball passes the pitcher and veers left of the
second baseman; it is in the second quadrant.
250
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251
424. b. Since all of these coordinate pairs have the same y-coordinate
they will all sit three units above the x-axis, forming a horizontal
line.
425. a. Three noncollinear points determine a plane. Choices b and d
are incorrect because G, H, and I do not lie on a common line,
nor can they be connected to form a straight line. Caution: Do not
assume points are noncollinear because they do not share a
common x or y coordinate. To be certain, plot the points on a
coordinate plane and try to connect them with one straight line.
426. c. First, nd the difference between like coordinates: x
1
x
2
and
y
1
y
2
: 4 (2) = 6. 5 0 = 5. Square both differences: 6
2
= 36.
(5)
2
= 25. Remember a negative number multiplied by a negative
number is a positive number. Add the squared differences together,
and take the square root of their sum: 36 + 25 = 61. d = 61 . If you
chose choice a, then your mistake began after you squared 5; the
square of a negative number is positive. If you chose choice b, then
your mistake began when subtracting the x-coordinates; two
negatives make a positive. If you chose d, then you didnt square
your differences; you doubled your differences.
Set 87
427. A (1,6). To locate A from the origin, count one space right of the
origin and six spaces up.
428. B (4,2.5). To locate B from the origin, count four spaces left of
the origin and two and a half spaces up.
429. C (7,0). To locate C from the origin, count seven spaces right of
the origin and no spaces up or down. This point lies on the x-axis.
430. D (0,3). To locate D from the origin, count no spaces left or
right, but count 3 spaces down from the origin. This point lies on
the y-axis, and x equals zero.
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Set 88
For questions 431434. see the graph below.
Set 89
435. The horizontal distance between M and O is the distance
between their x-coordinate: 4 (3) = 7. The vertical distance
between M and O is the distance between their y-coordinate:
5 (6) = 11.
436. The distance between M and O uses the answers from question
435 in the distance formula:
d = (x
2
x
1
)
2
+ ( y
2
y
1
)
2
= (4 3 )
2
+ (5 6)
2
=
(7)
2
+ (11)
2
= 170 13
M (4,5)
N (12,1)
P (0,5)
O (-3,6)
252
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253
437. Distance = 28. Because these two points form a vertical line, you
could just count the number of spaces along the lines length to
nd the distance between A and B. However, using the distance
formula: d =
(x
2
x
1
)
2
+ (y
2
y
1
)
2
=
(0 0)
2
+ (4
32)
2
=
0
2
+ (
28)
2
=
784
=
28
438. Distance = 26 . d =
(x
2
x
1
)
2
+ (y
2
y
1
)
2
=
(1 4
)
2
+ (
2 (1
))
2
=
(5)
2
+
(1)
2
= 25 + 1 = 26
439. Distance = 10. d =
(x
2
x
1
)
2
+ (y
2
y
1
)
2
=
(3 7
)
2
+ (3
3)
2
=
(10)
2
+ (0)
2
=
100
=
10
. Again, because these two points form
a horizontal line, you could just count the number of spaces along
the lines length to nd the distance between E and F.
440. Distance = 20. d =
(x
2
x
1
)
2
+ (y
2
y
1
)
2
=
(17 (
3)
2
+
(0 0)
2
=
(20)
2
+
(0)
2
=
400
=
20
. Because these two points also form a
horizontal line, you could just count the spaces along the lines
length to nd the distance between G and H.
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7233_501 Geometry(2n#58F5F2.qxd 3/8/12 4:18 PM Page 254
When two points on a coordinate grid are connected, they form a line
or line segment which has a slope. The slope of a line is the measure of its
steepness. Think of slope as the effort to climb a hill. A horizontal surface
is zero effort, so horizontal lines have a slope of 0. Steep hills take a lot of
effort to climb, so steep lines have greater slopes than gradually tilted lines.
Finally, a vertical surface cannot be climbed (without equipment), so verti-
cal lines have an undened slope (no slope).
slope of 0
steep slope
gradual slope
undefined
slope
y
x
20
The Slope of a Line
7233_501 Geometry(2n#58F5F2.qxd 3/8/12 4:18 PM Page 255
Positive and Negative Slopes
Slope is interpreted similarly to how words are readfrom left to right. If
a line is angled upward as you look at it from left to right, then it has a pos-
itive slope. Conversely, if a line is angled downward when read from left to
right, it has a negative slope. In the following coordinate plane, line l has a
positive slope and line r has a negative slope.
g
r
a
d
u
a
l
s
l
o
p
e
r
y
x
256
501 Geometry Questions
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257
Finding Slope
Slope is represented by a ratio of height to length (the legs of a right tri-
angle), or rise to run. It is written as
X
Y
X
Y
=
(
(
x
y
2
2
y
x
1
1
)
)
slope =
X
Y
=
(
(
x
y
2
2
y
x
1
1
)
)
=
(9
(4
(
7
3
)
))
=
1
3
2
=
4
1
A slope of
4
1
means that for every one unit down, the line move 4 units
to the right.
x-axis
y-axis
B
A
D
C
Slope A is negative
Slope B is positive
Slope C is positive
Slope D is negative
x
x
x
x
y y
y
y
501 Geometry Questions
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Graphing Slopes
If you are given the coordinate pair for points on a line, and the slope of that
line, you can draw the line on a coordinate graph. First, graph the coordinate
pair on an axis. Next, starting at that point, plot a second point by following
the map of the slope: move up or down according the to value of the numer-
ator, and then move left or right according to the value of the denominator.
Connect these points to graph the line. If the slope is negative, only one of your
movements will be negative, not both. For example: line h has a slope of
3
3
and
the coordinate pair (5,1) is on line h. Starting at (5,1), move three spaces down,
and three spaces to the right and plot a second point at (8,2).
(8,2)
(3)
(5,1)
x-axis
y
=
x
3
y-axis
258
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259
The Slopes of Perpendicular and Parallel Lines
Parallel lines have the same slope. Perpendicular lines have negative recip-
rocal slopes. If a slope is
1
2
, a perpendicular slope is 2.
Set 90
Choose the best answer.
441. Pam and Sam are hiking on two separate hills that have the same
steepness. If each hill were graphed, they would
a. have positive slopes
b. have negative slopes
c. be parallel lines
d. be steep lines
442. In American homes, a standard stair rises 7 for every 9. The
slope of a standard staircase is
a.
7
9
.
b.
2
7
.
c.
1
9
6
.
d.
9
7
.
443. Line Q has a slope of
1
9
. Line T is perpendicular to line Q. Line
T will have what kind of slope, compared to line Q?
a. positive and steep
b. negative and steep
c. negative and gradual
d. positive and gradual
444. Bethanys ramp to her ofce lobby rises 3 feet for every 36 feet.
The incline is
a.
3
1
6
fo
fe
o
e
t
t
.
b.
1
1
2
fo
fe
o
e
t
t
.
c.
1
1
2
fo
fe
o
e
t
t
.
d.
3
3
6
f
f
e
e
e
e
t
t
.
501 Geometry Questions
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445. A plane rises to an elevation of 24,500 feet from 6,300 feet over the
course of 30,000 horizontal feet. Which best describes the incline
of the planes course of ight during this elevation gain?
a.
1
9
5
1
0
b.
2
3
4
0
,
,
5
0
0
0
0
0
c.
2
6
4
3
5
d.
7
2
7
5
7
9
.
443. a. Since perpendicular lines have slopes that are negative reciprocals
of each other, the slope of line Twill be 9. Compared to the slope
9
1
,
this slope is positive and steep.
444. c. If the ramp rises 3 feet for every 36 feet, then the relationship of
rise over distance is
3
3
6
fo
fe
o
e
t
t
1
1
2
fo
fe
o
e
t
t
.
445. a. The planes elevation gain from 6,300 to 24,500 feet is 18,200
feet. Put this rise over the horizontal run of 30,000 feet:
1
3
8
0
,
,
2
0
0
0
0
0
=
1
9
5
1
0
.
446. b. All vertical lines have an undened slope.
Set 91
447.
2
3
. Subtract like coordinates: 2 10 = 12. 6 2 = 8. Place the
vertical change in distance over the horizontal change in distance:
1
8
2
. Then reduce the top and bottom of the fraction by 4. The
nal slope is
2
3
.
448. 5. Subtract like coordinates: 1 1 = 2. 0 10 = 10. Place the
vertical change in distance over the horizontal change in distance:
1
2
0
5
3
. The slope is
5
3
.
450. 0 (zero slope). Horizontal lines have zero slope (
1
0
8
= 0).
Set 92
For questions 451 through 453, see the graph below.
m
M
Q
S
n
x axis
y axis
l
501 Geometry Questions
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Set 93
454. You could draw the gure, or you could nd the slope between
each line. The slope of AB
is
(5
(2
(
6
1
)
))
4
4
1. The slope of BC
is
(1
(6
(
6
5
)
))
4
0
. The slope of CA
is
(5
(6
(
2
5
)
))
, or
0
4
. BC
is vertical
because its slope is undened; CA
is
(
(
8
3
(
5
6
)
))
, or
2
2
. The distance between A and B is (2)
2
+ (2)
2
,
or 22 . The slope of BC
is
(
(
5
6
5
4
)
)
, or
1
0
0
. The distance between B
and C is the difference of the x coordinates, or 10. The slope of CD
is
(
(
5
4
3
2
)
)
, or
2
2
. The distance between C and D is 2
2
+ 2
2
, or 22.
The slope of line DA
is
(
(
3
8
3
2
)
)
, or
0
10
and CD
have the
same slope and length, which means they are parallel and con-
gruent. Also opposite lines BC
and DA
/CD
and
BC
/DA
0
4
; its length is
the difference of y coordinates, or 4. Slope BC
is
0
4
; its length is
the difference of x coordinates, or 4. Slope of CD
is
6
0
; its length is
the difference of y coordinates, or 6. Finally, slope of DA
is (
2
1
); its
length is 4
2
+ ( 2
2
) , or 25 . Opposite sides AB
and CD
have the
same slope but measure different lengths; therefore they are
parallel and noncongruent. Figure ABCD is a trapezoid.
268
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Every line on a coordinate plane can be represented with a unique lin-
ear equation. This linear equation can be used to generate new points that
will be on the line. The same linear equation can also be used to test if given
points satisfy the equation and sit on the line. Linear equations have two
different basic forms, but no linear equation will ever have an x or y vari-
able with any exponent other than 1. (For example, y = 4x
2
and y
3
= 38 are
not linear equations.)
21
The Equation
of a Line
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Standard Form of Linear Equations
The rst form that linear equations can be written in is called the standard form:
Standard Form of Linear Equations: Ax + By = C,
where A, B, and C are all numbers and x and y remain as variables.
To test if a given coordinate pair is on the a line that is in standard form,
simply plug the coordinates into the x and y variables in the equation and
see if the result is true or false. For example, if you wanted to test to see if
the coordinate pairs (5,13) and (4,10) were on the line 6x + 3y = 9, plug in
each point separately and see:
(5,13)
6(5) + 3(13) = 9
30 + 39 = 9
9 = 9
Since this is a true statement, (5,13) is a solution to 6x + 3y = 9, and is
on that line.
(4,10)
6(4) + 3(10) = 9
24 + 30 = 9
6 9
Since this is a false statement, (4,10) is not a solution to 6x + 3y = 9,
because it is not on that line.
When using an equation to generate points that are on the line, it can be
easiest to isolate the x or y variable in the equation. In the following exam-
ple, the equation 6x + 3y = 9 is manipulated to get y on its own so that solu-
tions can easily be found:
6x + 3y = 9
+6x + 6x
3y = (9 + 6x)
3 3
y = 3 + 2x
270
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271
The line y = 3 + 2x is the same as the original line, 6x + 3y = 9, but it is
just in a different format. Once y is by itself, it is easy to nd points that sat-
isfy this equation and are on the line. This is done by plugging in values for
x and then solving for y as is shown in the table below:
This table shows that the points (0,3), (4,11), and (1,1) all sit on the line
6x + 3y = 9, which is the same as line y = 3 + 2x.
x 3
+
2x
y = 3
+
2x
0 3 + 2(0)
3 + 2(4)
3 + 2(1) 1
4
y
3
11
1
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Slope-Intercept Form of Linear Equations
The second form for linear equations is the Slope-Intercept form:
Slope-Intercept Form of Linear Equations: y = mx + b, where m
and b are numbers and x and y remain as variables. This form is partic-
ularly useful since m will always be the slope and b will always be the
y-intercept. The y-intercept is where the line crosses the y-axis. Lines
in this form are easy to graph: plot the y-intercept, use the slope to
plot two other points, and connect!
rise = 2
rise = 1
run = 3
run = 3
2
3
y axis
(4,0) y-intercept
(0,2) y-intercept
x axis
y =
x 4
1
3
y =
x + 2
2
3
= m =
y
x
1
3
= m =
y
x
272
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273
Set 94
Choose the best answer.
457. What distinguishes a linear equation from other types of
equations?
a. its graph is a horizontal line
b. its graph is a vertical line
c. its graph is a diagonal line
d. its variables have exponents of 1
458. The slope and y-intercept of the linear equation 2x + 3y = 3 is:
(Hint: Change this equation into Slope-Intercept form.)
a. slope =
2
3
, y-intercept = 1
b. slope = 2, y-intercept = 3
c. slope =
2
3
, y-intercept = 3
d. slope = 2, y-intercept = 1
459. What is the value of b if (2,3) satises the equation y =
1
2
x + b.
a. 2
b. 1
c. 3
d. 4
460. Which of the following points does not lie on the graph for the
linear equation (
3
2
)x 2y = 14.
a. (1,
2
4
5
)
b. (2,
1
2
1
)
c. (2,
1
2
7
)
d. (0,7)
461. Convert the linear equation 4x 2y = 4 into a slope-intercept equation.
a. y = 2x 2
b. y = 2x + 2
c. x =
1
2
y 2
d. x =
1
2
y + 2
501 Geometry Questions
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462. A (4,0), B (0,3), and C (8,9) satisfy which equation?
a. y =
4
3
x + 3
b. y =
3
4
x + 0
c. y =
3
4
x + 3
d. y =
6
8
x + 9
463. Find the missing y value if A, B, and C are collinear: A (3,1),
B (0, y), and C (3,9).
a. 1
b. 1
c. 3
d. 5
464. Which line perpendicularly meets line 1x + 2y = 4 on the y-axis?
a. y =
1
2
x + 2
b. y = 2x + 2
c. y = 2x 2
d. y =
1
2
x 2
465. Which of the following linear equations is not perpendicular to
1
2
x +
1
4
y =
1
8
?
a.
1
4
x +
1
2
y = 2
b.
3
2
x + 3y = 21
c. 2x 4y = 12
d. 2x + 4y = 12
Set 95
466. Which of the following linear equations is parallel to 2x + 3y = 6?
a. 3x + 2y = 6
b. y = 2x + 3
c. y =
2
3
x 5
d. y =
3
2
x + 4
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275
Systems of Linear Equations
A system of linear equations is when more than one equation is con-
sidered at the same time. When two nonparallel, but coplanar, lines are
graphed on the same coordinate graph, they will intersect at exactly one
point. This point of intersection is called the solution to a system of
equations. At this one coordinate pair, there exists an x- and y-value that
satisfy both linear equations. This (x,y) coordinate pair sits on both lines.
If lines are parallel there will not an intersection or a solution to that
system of equations. In this case, when the system is solved algebraically,
the variables will cancel out and you will be left with a false statement, like
4 = 3. This is how you know that they system is unsolvable because the
lines are parallel.
While there are several methods that can be used to nd the point that
solves a system of linear equations, only two methods will be presented here.
Method 1: Both of the equations are written in y = mx + b form.
In this case, set the two equations equal to one another since they both are
equal to y. Once you do this, you can combine like terms, solve for x, and
then plug x back into either equation to solve for y.
Example: Find the solution to the system of equations
y = 2x 20 and y = 4x + 40
Set the equations equal to each other: 2x 20 = 4x + 40
Solve for x: 6x = 60, so x = 10
Now plug in x = 10 to solve for y: y = 2(10) 20, y = 0
The solution is (10,0), which works in both equations.
Method 2: One equation has x or y alone and the other equation
does not.
In this case, use substitution to put the equation that has one isolated vari-
able into the other, more complex equation. Then solve for the existing
variable and plug that answer back into either equation to solve for the
other variable.
Example: Find the solution to the system of equations
x = 3y 12 and 2y + 4x = 28
Sub 3y 12 in for x in the other equation: 2y + 4(3y 12) = 28
Solve for y: 2y + 12y 48 = 28, so 10y = 20 and y = 2
Now plug in y = 2 to solve for x: x = 3(2) 12 = 6 12, x = 6
The solution is (6, 2), which works in both equations.
501 Geometry Questions
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Find the coordinate pair that is the solution for each system of
equations below.
467. 10x 9y = 6
x = 1 + y
468. y = (
2
3
)x + 4
y = 1x + 4
469. y = (
2
3
)x 2
4x + 6y = 20
470. y = (
3
4
)x 11
y = (
1
2
)x + 4
Set 96
Use the line equations below to answer questions 471 through 474.
The three linear equations intersect to form ABC.
x = 0
y = 0
y = x 3.
471. What are the vertices of ABC?
472. What is the special name for ABC?
473. What is the perimeter of ABC?
474. What is the area of ABC?
276
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277
Set 97
Use the line equations below to answer questions 475 through 479.
The four linear equations intersect to form quadrilateral ABCD.
y =
1
3
x 3
y =
1
3
x 1
y =
1
3
x 1
y =
1
3
x 3
475. What are the vertices of quadrilateral ABCD?
476. Show that quadrilateral ABCD is a parallelogram.
477. Show that diagonals AC
and BD
perpendicular.
478. What special parallelogram is quadrilateral ABCD?
479. What is the area of quadrilateral ABCD?
501 Geometry Questions
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Answers
Set 94
457. d. The x and y variables in linear equations can only have exponents
of 1. If x or y is squared or cubed, then it is not a linear equation.
458. a. Change 2x + 3y = 3 into slope-intercept form by adding 2x to
both sides and dividing everything by 3. The slope-intercept form
is y =
2
3
(x) 1, where the slope =
2
3
and the y-intercept = 1.
459. d. Plug the value of x and y from the given coordinate pair into the
equation and solve: 3 =
1
2
(2) + b. 3 = (1) + b. 4 = b.
460. c. The only point that does not satisfy the linear equation
(
3
2
)x 2y = 14 is (2,
1
2
7
) :
3
2
(2) 2(
1
2
7
) = 3 17 = 20. 20 14.
461. a. To convert a standard linear equation into a slope- intercept
equation, single out the y variable. Subtract 4x from both sides:
2y = 4x + 4. Divide both sides by 2: y = 2x 2. Choices c and d
are incorrect because they single out the x variable. Choice b is
incorrect because after both sides of the equation are divided by
2, the signs were not reversed on the right hand side.
462. c. Find the slope between any two of the given points:
(
(0
4
3
0
)
)
=
3
4
,
or
3
4
. B is the y-intercept. Plug the slope and y value of B into the
formula y = mx + b. y =
3
4
x + 3.
463. d. The unknown y value is also the intercept value of a line that
connects all three points. First, nd the slope between A and C:
3 3 = 6. 1 (9) = 8.
8
6
or
3
4
1
4
next to y). The slope-intercept form is y = 2x +
1
2
, which means
that the slope is 2. Since perpendicular lines have negative reciprocal
slopes, all lines that have a slope of
1
2
will be perpendicular to
1
2
x +
1
4
y
=
1
8
. When changed into slope-intercept form, choice d becomes
y =
1
2
x + 3 which has a slope of
1
2
, so this will not be perpendicular
to the original equation.
466. c. Change 2x + 3y = 6 into slope-intercept form by subtracting 2x
from both sides and dividing everything by 3 (to get rid of the 3
next to y). The slope-intercept form is y =
2
3
x + 2, which means
that the slope is
2
3
. Since parallel lines have equal slopes, all lines
that have a slope of
2
3
.will be parallel to 2x + 3y = 6. Choice c,
y =
2
3
x 5 is the only equation that has a slope of
2
3
.
467. (3,4). Sub 1 + y in for x in the other equation and solve for y:
10(1 + y) 9y = 6
10 + 10y 9y = 6
1y = 6 10, so y = 4
Sub y = 4 in for y and solve for x:
x = 1 + (4), x = 3
468. (0,4) Set the two equations equal to one another and then solve for x:
(
2
3
)x + 4 = 1x + 4
(
2
3
)x + 1x = 4 4
(
5
3
)x = 0
x = 0
Sub x = 0 in for x and solve for y:
y = 1(0) + 4, y = 4
501 Geometry Questions
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469. No solution: parallel lines. Sub (
2
3
)x 2 in for y in the other
equation and solve for x:
y = (
2
3
)x 2
4x + 6((
2
3
)x 2) = 20
4x + 4x 12 = 20
12 20. These two lines must be parallel since 12 does not equal 20,
which indicates that there is no solution to this system of equations.
470. (12,2) Set the two equations equal to one another and then solve
for x:
(
3
4
)x 11 = (
1
2
)x + 4
(
3
4
)x + (
1
2
)x = 4 + 11
(
5
4
)x = 15
x = 12
Sub x = 12 in for x and solve for y:
y = (
1
2
)(12) + 4, y = 2
Set 95
471. A (0,0), B (3,0), and C (0,-3). Usually, in pairs, you would
solve for each point of interception; however, x = 0 (the y-axis) and
y = 0 (the x-axis) meet at the origin; therefore the origin is the rst
point of interception. One at a time, plug x = 0 and y = 0 into the
equation y = x 3 to nd the two other points of interception: y = 0
3. y = 3; and 0 = x 3. 3 = x. The vertices of ABC are A (0,0),
B (3,0), and C (0,3).
472. ABC is an isosceles right triangle. AB
has
no slope, or undened slope. They are perpendicular, and they
both measure 3 lengths. ABC is an isosceles right triangle.
473. Perimeter = 6 units + 32 units. AB
and CA
. d = 3
2
+ 3
2
. d = 18 . d = 32 . The
perimeter of ABC is the sum of the lengths of its sides: 3 + 3 +
32 = 6 + 32 .
280
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281
474. Area = 4.5 square units. The area of ABC is
1
2
its height times
its length, or
1
2
(3 3). a = 4.5 square units.
Set 96
475. In pairs, nd each point of interception:
A (3,2).
1
3
x 3 =
1
3
x 1.
1
3
x
1
3
x = 3 1.
2
3
x = 2. x = 3;
y =
1
3
(3) 3. y = 1 3. y = 2.
B (0,1).
1
3
x 1 =
1
3
x 1.
1
3
x +
1
3
x = 1 1.
2
3
x = 0. x = 0;
y =
1
3
(0) 1. y = 1.
C (3,2).
1
3
x 1 =
1
3
x 3.
1
3
x
1
3
x = 1 3.
2
3
x = 2. x = 3;
y =
1
3
(3) 1. y = 1 1. y = 2.
D (0,3).
1
3
x 3 =
1
3
x 3.
1
3
x +
1
3
x = 3 3.
2
3
x = 0. x = 0;
y =
1
3
(0) 3. y = 3.
476. In slope-intercept form, the slope is the constant preceding x. You
can very quickly determine that AB
and CD
, and BC
, and DA
have
the same slopes. The length of each line segment is:
mAB
= 10 . d = (3 0 )
2
+ ( 2 1 )
2
. d = 9 + 1 . d = 10 .
mBC
= 10 . d = (0 3)
2
+ (1 2)
2
. d = 9 + 1 . d = 10 .
mCD
= 10 . d = (3 0)
2
+ (2 3)
2
. d = 9 + 1 . d = 10 .
mDA
= 10 . d = (0 3 )
2
+ ( 3 2 )
2
. d = 9 + 1 . d = 10 .
477. The slope of a line is the change in y over the change in x. The
slope of AC
is
2
3
(
3
2)
, or
0
6
. The slope of BD
is
1
0
(
0
3)
, or
2
0
.
Lines with zero slopes and no slopes are perpendicular; therefore
diagonals AC
and BD
are perpendicular.
478. Rhombus. Quadrilateral ABCD is a rhombus because opposite
sides are parallel, all four sides are congruent, and diagonals are
perpendicular.
501 Geometry Questions
7233_501 Geometry(2n#58F5F2.qxd 3/8/12 4:18 PM Page 281
479. Area = 6 square units. The area of a rhombus is its base times its
height or half the product of its diagonals. In this case, half the
product of its diagonals is the easiest to nd because the diagonals
are vertical and horizontal lines. AC
is 2
units long:
1
2