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Splash Screen

Jan 02, 2016

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Basil Huffman

Splash Screen. Refer to the figure. Name two acute vertical angles. A.  AED and  BEC B.  AEB and  DEC C.  DEA and  DEC D.  BEC and  BEA. 5-Minute Check 1. Refer to the figure. Name a linear pair whose vertex is E. A.  AED ,  BEC B.  AEB ,  BEA C.  CED ,  AEB - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Splash Screen
Page 2: Splash Screen

Over Lesson 1–5

A. AED and BEC

B. AEB and DEC

C. DEA and DEC

D. BEC and BEA

Refer to the figure. Name two acute vertical angles.

Page 3: Splash Screen

Over Lesson 1–5

A. AED, BEC

B. AEB, BEA

C. CED, AEB

D. AEB, AED

Refer to the figure. Name a linear pair whose vertex is E.

Page 4: Splash Screen

Over Lesson 1–5

A. AEB

B. AED

C. AEC

D. CEB

Refer to the figure. Name an angle supplementary to BEC.

Page 5: Splash Screen

Over Lesson 1–5

A. m1 = 60, m2 = 120

B. m1 = 100, m2 = 80

C. m1 = 100, m2 = 50

D. m1 = 120, m2 = 60

1 and 2 are a pair of supplementary angles, and the measure of 1 is twice the measure of 2. Find the measures of both angles.

Page 6: Splash Screen

Over Lesson 1–5

A. 30

B. 45

C. 55

D. 60

If RS is perpendicular to ST and SV is the angle bisector of RST, what is mTSV?

Page 7: Splash Screen

Over Lesson 1–5

A. 40

B. 50

C. 80

D. 140

The supplement of A measures 140 degrees. What is the measure of the complement of A?

Page 8: Splash Screen

Content Standards

G.GPE.7 Use coordinates to compute perimeters of polygons and areas of triangles and rectangles, e.g., using the distance formula.

Mathematical Practices

2 Reason abstractly and quantitatively.

6 Attend to precision.

Page 9: Splash Screen

You will be able to:

• Identify and name polygons.

• Find perimeter, circumference, and area of two-dimensional figures.

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Page 11: Splash Screen

Polygons Not Polygons

Page 12: Splash Screen

Suppose the line containing each side is drawn. If any of the lines contain any point in the interior of the polygon, then it is concave. Otherwise, it is convex.

Concave Convex

Page 13: Splash Screen

Number of Sides Polygon

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

11

12

n-gon

Page 14: Splash Screen

• Equilateral polygon- polygon in which all sides are congruent

• Equiangular polygon- polygon in which all angles are congruent

• Regular polygon- a convex polygon that is both equilateral and equiangular

• Irregular polygon- not regular

Page 15: Splash Screen

Name and Classify Polygons

A. Name the polygon by its number of sides. Then classify it as convex or concave and regular or irregular.

There are 4 sides, so this is a quadrilateral.

No line containing any of the sides will pass through the

interior of the quadrilateral, so it is convex.

The sides are not congruent, so it is irregular.Answer: quadrilateral, convex, irregular

Page 16: Splash Screen

Name and Classify Polygons

B. Name the polygon by its number of sides. Then classify it as convex or concave and regular or irregular.

There are 9 sides, so this is a nonagon.

Lines containing some of the sides will pass through the interior of the nonagon, so it is concave.

Since the polygon is concave, it must be irregular.

Answer: nonagon, concave, irregular

Page 17: Splash Screen

A. triangle, concave, regular

B. triangle, convex, irregular

C. quadrilateral, convex, regular

D. triangle, convex, regular

A. Name the polygon by the number of sides. Then classify it as convex or concave and regular or irregular.

Page 18: Splash Screen

A. quadrilateral, convex, irregular

B. pentagon, convex, irregular

C. quadrilateral, convex, regular

D. quadrilateral, concave, irregular

B. Name the polygon by the number of sides. Then classify it as convex or concave and regular or irregular.

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• Perimeter- sum of the lengths of the sides

• Circumference- distance around the circle

• Area- the number of square units needed to cover a surface

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Page 21: Splash Screen

Find Perimeter and Area

A. Find the perimeter and area of the figure.

P = 2ℓ + 2w Perimeter of a rectangle

= 2(4.6) + 2(2.3) ℓ = 4.6, w = 2.3

= 13.8 Simplify.

Answer: The perimeter of the rectangle is 13.8 cm.

Page 22: Splash Screen

Find Perimeter and Area

A. Find the perimeter and area of the figure.

A = ℓw Area of a rectangle

Answer: The area of the rectangle is about 10.6 cm2.

= (4.6)(2.3) ℓ = 4.6, w = 2.3

= 10.58 Simplify.

Page 23: Splash Screen

Find Perimeter and Area

B. Find the circumference and area of the figure.

≈ 25.1 Use a calculator.

Answer: The circumference of the circle is about 25.1 inches.

Page 24: Splash Screen

Find Perimeter and Area

B. Find the circumference and area of the figure.

≈ 50.3 Use a calculator.

Answer: The area of the circle is about 50.3 square inches.

Page 25: Splash Screen

A. P = 12.4 cm, A = 24.8 cm2

B. P = 24.8 cm, A = 34.83 cm2

C. P = 34.83 cm, A = 69.66 cm2

D. P = 24.4 cm, A = 32.3 cm2

A. Find the perimeter and area of the figure.

Page 26: Splash Screen

A. C ≈ 25.1 m, A ≈ 50.3 m2

B. C ≈ 25.1 m, A ≈ 201.1 m2

C. C ≈ 50.3 m, A ≈ 201.1 m2

D. C ≈ 201.1 m, A ≈ 402.1 m2

B. Find the circumference and area of the figure.

Page 27: Splash Screen

Terri has 19 feet of tape to mark an area in the classroom where the students may read. Which of these shapes has a perimeter or circumference that would use most or all of the tape?

A square with side length of 5 feet

B circle with the radius of 3 feet

C right triangle with each leg length of 6 feet

D rectangle with a length of 8 feet and a width of 3 feet

Read the Test Item

You are asked to compare the perimeters orcircumference of four different shapes.

Largest Area

Page 28: Splash Screen

Solve the Test ItemFind each perimeter or circumference.

Square

P = 4s Perimeter of a square

= 4(5) s = 5

= 20 feet Simplify.Circle

C = 2r Circumference

= 2(3) r = 3

= 6 Simplify.

≈ 18.85 feet Use a calculator.

Largest Area

Page 29: Splash Screen

Right TriangleUse the Pythagorean Theorem to find the length of the hypotenuse.

c2 = a2 + b2 Pythagorean Theorem

= 62 + 62 a = 6, b = 6

= 72 Simplify.

≈ 8.49 Use a calculator.

P = a + b + c Perimeter of a triangle

6 + 6 + 8.49 Substitution

20.49 feet Simplify.

.

Largest Area

Page 30: Splash Screen

Rectangle

P = 2ℓ + 2w Perimeter of a rectangle

= 2(8) + 2(3) ℓ = 8, w = 3

= 22 feet Simplify.

The only shape for which Terri has enough tape is the circle.

Answer: The correct answer is B.

Largest Area

Page 31: Splash Screen

A. a rectangle with a length of 26 inches and a width of 18 inches

B. a square with side length of 22 inches

C. a right triangle with each leg length of 26 inches

D. a circle with radius of 14 inches

Each of the following shapes has a perimeter of about 88 inches. Which one has the greatest area?

Page 32: Splash Screen

Perimeter and Area on the Coordinate Plane

Find the perimeter and area of a pentagon ABCDE with A(0, 4), B(4, 0), C(3, –4), D(–3, –4), and E(–3, 1).

Page 33: Splash Screen

Perimeter and Area on the Coordinate Plane

Step 1

By counting squares on the grid, we find that CD = 6 units and DE = 5 units. Use the Distance Formula,

to find AB, BC, and EA.

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Perimeter and Area on the Coordinate Plane

The perimeter of pentagon ABCDE is 5.7 + 4.1 + 6 + 5 + 4.2 or about 25 units.

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Perimeter and Area on the Coordinate Plane

Step 2

Divide the pentagon into two triangles and a rectangle.

Find the area of the triangles.

Area of Triangle 1

Area of a triangle

Substitute.

Simplify.

Page 36: Splash Screen

Perimeter and Area on the Coordinate Plane

Substitute.

Simplify.

Area of Triangle 2

Page 37: Splash Screen

Perimeter and Area on the Coordinate Plane

Find the area of the rectangle.

Area of a rectangle

Substitute.

Simplify.

The area of pentagon ABCDE is 9 + 2.5 + 30 or 41.5 square units.

Answer: The perimeter is about 25 units and the area is 41.5 square units.

Page 38: Splash Screen

A. 17.9

B. 22

C. 13.3

D. 9.1

Find the perimeter of quadrilateral WXYZ with W(2, 4), X(–3, 3), Y(–1, 0), and Z(3, –1).

Page 39: Splash Screen

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