Geometry Definitions
line
A never-ending straight path
regular polygon
A polygon that has all sides congruent and all angles congruent
rate of change
The change in a quantity over time
side
The segments that form a closed figure
perimeter
the sum of the lengths of the sides of a polygon
space
A boundless three-dimensional set of all points
conjunction
A compound statement formed by joining two statements with the word and
conjecture
A conclusion reached that is based on inductive reasoning
angle
A figure formed by two rays with a common endpoint
altitude
A line segment perpendicular to the base of a figure with endpoints on the base and on the vertex opposite the base
transversal
A line that intersects two or more other lines to form eight or more angles
rhombus
A parallelogram with four congruent sides
rectangle
A parallelogram with four right angles
ray
A part of a line that extends indefinitely in one direction from a fixed point
concave
A polygon for which a point on at least one of its diagonals lies outside the polygon
convex
A polygon for which all diagonals are located in the interior of the polygon
n-gon
A polygon with n sides
regular polyhedron
A polyhedron in which the faces are regular congruent polygons
prism
A polyhedron with two parallel, congruent faces called bases. A solid with the following characteristics: 1. Two faces, called the bases, are formed by congruent polygons that lie in parallel planes. 2. The faces that are not bases, called lateral faces, are formed by parallelograms. 3. The intersection of two adjacent lateral faces are called lateral edges and are parallel segments.
parallelogram
A quadrilateral with both pairs of opposite sides parallel and congruent
kite
A quadrilateral with exactly two distinct pairs of adjacent congruent sides
angle bisector
A ray whose endpoint is the vertex of the angle and is located in the interior of the angle. It separates a given angle into two angles with equal measure.
postulate
A rule of geometry that is accepted as being true without proof
diagonal
A segment joining two nonconsecutive vertices of a polygon. In the figure, is a diagonal
perpendicular bisector
A segment that is perpendicular to another segment and passes through that segment's midpoint
midsegment of a trapezoid
A segment with endpoints that are the midpoints of two sides of a triangle
included side
A side common to two given angles of a triangle
polygon
A simple closed figure in a plane formed by three or more line segments
pyramid
A solid figure that has a polygon for a base and triangles for sides. A pyramid is named for the shape of its base. A solid with the following characteristics: 1. All the faces, except one, intersect at a common point called the vertex. 2. The face that does not intersect at the vertex is called the base. The base is formed by a polygon. 3. The faces meeting at the vertex are called lateral faces. They are formed by triangles.
cylinder
A solid figure whose bases are formed by congruent circles in parallel planes and whose lateral surface is curved. The segment whose endpoints are the centers of the circular bases is called the axis of the cylinder. The altitude is a segment perpendicular to the bases with an endpoint in each base.
polyhedron
A solid with four or more flat surfaces that are polygonal regions
point
A specific location in space with no size or shape
theorem
A statement that can be justified by logical reasoning and must be proven before it is accepted as true
cone
A three-dimensional figure with one circular base and one vertex. A curved surface connects the base and the vertex
reflection
A transformation in which a figure is flipped over a line of symmetry
translation
A transformation in which a figure is slid in any direction
rotation
A transformation in which a figure is turned around a fixed point
isosceles trapezoid
A trapezoid with two congruent legs
equilateral polygon
A triangle having all three sides congruent and all three angles congruent
right triangle
A triangle having one right angle
acute triangle
A triangle in which each angle measures less than 90°
isosceles triangle
A triangle with at least two congruent sides
scalene triangle
A triangle with no congruent sides
equiangular polygon
A triangle with three congruent angles
equiangular triangle
A triangle with three congruent angles
plane
A two-dimensional flat surface that extends in all directions
interior
All points between the two sides of an angle
exterior
All points outside the sides of the angle
included angle
An angle formed by two given sides of a triangle
right angle
An angle that measures exactly 90°
obtuse angle
An angle that measures more than 90° but less than 180°
acute angle
An angle with a measure greater than 0° and less than 90°
point-slope form
An equation of the form y - y1 = m(x - x1), where m is the slope and (x1, y1) is a given point on a nonvertical line
slope-intercept form
An equation of the form y = mx + b, where m is the slope and b is the y-intercept
algebraic proof
An expression consisting of one or more numbers and variables along with one or more arithmetic operations
adjacent angles
Angles that have the same vertex, share a common side, and do not overlap
congruent
Having the same measure
parallel lines
Lines in the same plane that never intersect and have the same slope
perpendicular
Lines which meet to form right angles and whose slopes have a product of -1
midpoint
On a line segment, the point that is halfway between the endpoints
vertical angles
Opposite angles formed by the intersection of two lines
line segment
Part of a line containing two endpoints and all the points between them
corresponding parts
Parts of congruent or similar figures that match
between
Point R is between points P and Q if and only if R, P, and Q are collinear and PR + RQ = PQ
congruent polygons
Polygons that have the same shape and size
vertex
The common endpoint of the rays forming the angle
distance
The distance between two points
base angles
The equal angles formed by the base and the congruent sides of an isosceles triangle
base
The faces on the top and bottom of the figure
edge
The intersection of faces of a three-dimensional figure
median
The middle number in a set of data when the data are arranged in numerical order. If the data has an even number, the median is the mean of the two middle numbers
degree
The most common unit of measure for angles
volume
The number of cubic units needed to fill the space occupied by a solid
area
The number of square units needed to cover a surface enclosed by a geometric figure
orthocenter
The point of concurrency of the altitudes of a triangle
incenter
The point of concurrency of the angle bisectors of a triangle
circumcenter
The point of concurrency of the perpendicular bisectors of a triangle
centroid
The point of intersection of the three medians of a triangle
construction
The process of drawing a figure using only a compass and a straightedge
slope
The ratio of the change in the y-coordinates (rise) to the corresponding change in the x-coordinates (run) as you move from one point to another along a line
sphere
The set of all points in space that are a given distance from a given point, called the center. It has the following characteristics: 1. A radius is a segment whose endpoints are the center and a point on the sphere. 2. A chord is a segment whose endpoints are points on the sphere. 3. A diameter is a chord of the sphere that contains the center.
intersection
The set of elements common to two or more sets as in compound inequalities and Venn diagrams
legs
The sides of a right triangle that form the right angle
converse
The statement formed by exchanging the hypothesis and conclusion of a conditional statement
inverse
The statement formed by negating both the hypothesis and conclusion of a conditional statement
surface area
The sum of the areas of all the faces of a three-dimensional figure
concurrent lines
Three or more lines or segments that meet at a common point
collinear
Three or more points that lie on the same line
segment bisector
To separate something into two congruent parts
complementary angles
Two angles are complementary if the sum of their measures is 90°
supplementary angles
Two angles are supplementary if the sum of their measures is 180°
skew lines
Two nonparallel lines that do not intersect. In the figure, and are skew segments
opposite rays
Two rays that are part of the same line and have only their endpoints in common. In the figure, and are opposite rays
point
a location
coplanar
points that lie oin the same plane
linear pair
points upon a line
undefined terms
points, planes, lines in geometry
face
surface of a figure
circumference
the distance around a circle