Math Terms: Geometry
Translation (b)
A _________ of the plane is a transformation which shifts all the points in a plane figure, without altering the shape of the figure.
Composite
A figure that is made up of two or more basic figures is called __________.
Point-Slope Form
A form of writing a linear equation when you are given 2 points. y - y1 = m(x - x1).
Symmetry (a)
A line which divides an object into two mirror images is called a line of _________.
Rhombus
A parallelogram with four congruent sides.
Symmetry (b)
A plane which cuts a solid into two identical halves is called a plane of _____________.
Inscribed Polygon
A polygon whose vertices lie on a circle.
Regular Polygon
A polygon with congruent angles and congruent sides is called a ______ polygon.
Octagon
A polygon with eight sides.
Pentagon
A polygon with five sides.
Hexagon
A polygon with six sides.
Kite
A quadrilateral with two pairs of adjacent congruent sides.
Square
A rhombus with four right angles.
Apothem
A segment drawn from the center of a regular polygon perpendicular to the side of the polygon.
Circumscribed
A term for a geometric figure that encloses another geometric figure.
Rigid
A transformation is called _________ if it preserves the shape and size of an object.
Dilation
A transformation that increases or decreased the size of a figure according to the scale factor.
Equiangular Triangle
A triangle with all congruent angles.
Obtuse Triangle
A triangle with one angle that measures more than 90 degrees.
Composite Figure
An irregular shape that can be split into familiar shapes such as rectangles, triangles, and circles in order to find the area.
Rotational Symmetry
An object that looks the same after a certain amount of rotation.
Reflectional Symmetry
An object where one half is the reflection of the other half.
Congruent Figures
Figures that have the same size and same shape. Their corresponding angles and sides are equal.
Rate Of Change
Often considered the slope, this is the comparison of two different quantities that are changing.
Face
One of the polygons that makes up a geometric solid.
Rate
The amount of increase or decrease in a function usually written as a fraction.
Whole
The counting numbers, together with 0, are called the _____ numbers.
Distance Formula
The formula used to find the length between two points in a coordinate plane.
Midpoint Formula
The formula used to find the point that lies half-way between two points in a coordinate plane.
Slope Formula
The formula used to find the rate of change between two points.
Preimage
The original object or figure before a transformation has taken place.
Intercepts
The points on the x and y-axis where the graph crosses the axis.
Image
The resulting object or figure after a transformation has taken place.
Edge
The segment formed by the intersection of two faces in a geometric solid.
Circle
The set of points in a plane that are equidistant from a given point.
Legs
The sides of a right triangle that form the right angle.
Coordinate Geometry
The study of geometry using ordered pairs is called _______ geometry.
Congruent
These are angles, segments, triangles etc. that have exactly the same measures.
Angle
These are two rays sharing a common endpoint. They are typically measured in degrees or radians.
Geometric Transformation
This can be a reflection, rotation, translation, or dilation.
Slope
This describes how much a line rises or falls between any two points on that line. Algebraically it is expressed as (y2 - y1)/ (x2 - x1) for the line passing through (x1, y1) and (x2, y2).
Euler's Formula
This formula shows us that faces + vertices = edges + 2 for solid figures.
Polygon
This is a closed plane figure formed by three or more line segments that do not cross over each other.
Equation Of A Circle
This is a conic section. The standard form is (x - h)squared + (y - k)squared = (r)squared.
Symmetrical Figures
This is a figure that can be folded flat along a line so that the two halves match perfectly.
Concave Polygon
This is a figure with at least three sides which only intersect at their endpoints and no adjacent sides are collinear; and a diagonal that connects two nonconsecutive endpoints can contain points outside the polygon.
Convex Polygon
This is a figure with at least three sides which only intersect at their endpoints and no adjacent sides are collinear; and a diagonal that connects two nonconsecutive endpoints cannot contain points outside the polygon, the entire diagonal is contained within the polygon.
Plane
This is a flat surface extending in all directions.
Radius
This is a line segment between the center and a point on the circle or sphere.
Coordinate Plane
This is a plane with two axes as a frame of reference. The x-axis is a horizontal line and the y-axis is perpendicular to it (i.e., the y-axis is vertical). The intersection of the two axes is called the origin.
Triangle
This is a polygon with three sides.
Parallelogram
This is a quadrilateral that contains two pairs of parallel sides.
Rectangle
This is a quadrilateral with four congruent angles (all 90°).
Acute Triangle
This is a triangle in which all of the angles are less than 90°.
Right Triangle
This is a triangle which has one 90-degree angle.
Equilateral
This is a triangle with all sides equal in length.
Isosceles
This is a triangle with exactly two congruent sides.
Scalene
This is a triangle with three unequal sides.
Ordered
This is a way of expressing a relationship between x and y in set notation. It is called an ____ pair.
Obtuse
This is an angle having a measure greater than 90° and up to 180°.
Acute Angle
This is an angle whose measure is between 0 degrees and 90 degrees.
Right
This is an angle whose measure is exactly 90°.
Estimation
This is an approximate calculation of quantity or degree or worth.
Slope-Intercept Form
This is an equation of a line in the form y=mx+b.
Reflection
This is flipping a figure over the axis of symmetry. Every point has a corresponding point in the new image on the opposite side of the axis of symmetry, except when the point lies on the axis.
Area Of A Circle
This is found by multiplying pi by the radius squared.
Rotation
This is moving a figure around a fixed point, which may be inside, on the edge, or outside the figure. Movement may be clockwise or counterclockwise.
Quadrant
This is one of four sections formed by the intersection of the x-axis and y-axis on a Cartesian coordinate plane.
Translation (a)
This is sliding a given figure in a certain direction, movement of the figure is shown by vectors. This is an isometry.
Area
This is the extent of a 2-dimensional shape enclosed within a boundary. Measured in length units squared (cm2; or in2; etc).
X-Axis
This is the horizontal axis in a coordinate graph.
Coordinates
This is the pair of numbers giving the location of a point.
Origin
This is the point where the x-axis crosses the y-axis. The coordinate location is the ordered pair (0,0).
Space
This is the set of all points. It is made up of an infinite number of planes.
Perimeter
This is the sum of the lengths of all the sides of a polygon, expressed in linear units.
Y-Axis
This is the vertical axis in a coordinate graph.
System Of Equations
This is two or more equations with common variables, also known as a linear system.
Turn
This is what we call rotating a shape around a point. Another name for this is a rotation.