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“Education is our passport to the future, for tomorrow belongs to the people who prepare for it today.” ― Malcolm X Do Now Put your 2.5 worksheet on your desk ready to be stamped. Take a protractor from the front. Take out your compass. Write down the linear pairs conjecture Write down the vertical angles conjecture

Put your 2.5 worksheet on your desk ready to be stamped. Take a protractor from the front

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“Education is our passport to the future, for tomorrow belongs to the people who prepare for it today.” ― Malcolm X Do Now. Put your 2.5 worksheet on your desk ready to be stamped. Take a protractor from the front. Take out your compass. Write down the linear pairs conjecture - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Put your 2.5 worksheet on your desk ready to be stamped. Take a protractor from the front

“Education is our passport to the future, for tomorrow belongs to the people who prepare for it today.”

― Malcolm X

Do NowPut your 2.5 worksheet on your desk ready to be stamped.

Take a protractor from the front.

Take out your compass.

Write down the linear pairs conjecture

Write down the vertical angles conjecture

Page 2: Put your 2.5 worksheet on your desk ready to be stamped. Take a protractor from the front

Parallel Lines and Transversals

Page 3: Put your 2.5 worksheet on your desk ready to be stamped. Take a protractor from the front

Parallel Lines Two lines are said to be parallel if(i) they both lie in the same plane, and,(ii) they do not intersect (or cross each other)

Page 4: Put your 2.5 worksheet on your desk ready to be stamped. Take a protractor from the front

Transversal A third line that crosses a pair of parallel lines on a slant As the transversal crosses the two parallel lines, eight angles are formed

Page 5: Put your 2.5 worksheet on your desk ready to be stamped. Take a protractor from the front

Draw this in your notes

∠1 = ∠3 = ∠5 = ∠7 and ∠2 = ∠4 = ∠6 = ∠8

Page 6: Put your 2.5 worksheet on your desk ready to be stamped. Take a protractor from the front

Linear PairsPairs of adjacent angles are supplementary (always add up to 180o) , as you can see from the figure. Thus ∠ 1 + ∠ 2 = 180o , ∠ 2 + ∠ 3 = 180o , ∠ 3 + ∠ 4 = 180o , ∠ 5 + ∠ 6 = 180o , etc.

Page 7: Put your 2.5 worksheet on your desk ready to be stamped. Take a protractor from the front

Corresponding Angles

Angles in the same relative position around the two intersection points are called corresponding angles . Thus ∠ 1 and ∠ 5 are corresponding angles, as are ∠ 4 and ∠ 8,∠ 2 and ∠ 6, and also ∠ 3 and ∠ 7. Corresponding angles are congruent (same angle measure).

Page 8: Put your 2.5 worksheet on your desk ready to be stamped. Take a protractor from the front

Alternate Interior Angles

Alternate sides of the transversalInside the parallel lines∠3 and ∠5 are called alternate interior angles. ∠4 and ∠6 are also alternate interior angles. Alternate interior angles are congruent.

Page 9: Put your 2.5 worksheet on your desk ready to be stamped. Take a protractor from the front

Alternate Exterior Angles

Alternate sides of the transversalOutside the parallel lines∠2 and ∠8 are called alternate exterior angles. ∠1 and ∠7 are also alternate exterior angles. Alternate exterior angles are congruent.

Page 10: Put your 2.5 worksheet on your desk ready to be stamped. Take a protractor from the front

Vertical Angles When two lines cross they form four angles.∠ 1 and ∠ 3 are said to be vertical angles ∠ 2 and ∠ 4 also form vertical angles.Vertical angles are congruent. Thus ∠ 1 = ∠ 3 and

∠ 2 = ∠ 4

Page 11: Put your 2.5 worksheet on your desk ready to be stamped. Take a protractor from the front

Determine the values of angles A, B, C,

and D, in the figure below. Assume that the horizontal lines are

parallel.

Page 12: Put your 2.5 worksheet on your desk ready to be stamped. Take a protractor from the front

Exit Slip 1. Give a counterexample to this

statement: “If two angles are supplementary, then they are congruent.”

2. Use the diagram at the right • Find m<1+m<2.• Find m<4.• Find m<3+m<4.

3. Name the relationship between <1 and <4.

4. Name the relationship between <1 and <2.