Answer Key - CK-12 Chapter 01 Basic Geometry Concepts PDF
Answer Key - CK-12 Chapter 01 Basic Geometry Concepts PDF
Answer Key - CK-12 Chapter 01 Basic Geometry Concepts PDF
Answers
1. 2.
D
B C
A
E
3. 4.
G
X W
Y Q
Z
P
5. This problem describes any quadrilateral with the diagonals drawn in.
8. Plane V, Plane RST, Plane RTS, Plane STR, Plane SRT, Plane TSR, and Plane TRS.
10. Possible Answers sun rays, laser beam, the hands on a clock, foul lines on a baseball
field, the light from a flashlight.
12. A postulate is assumed true and a theorem must be proven true. All postulates, by
definition, are true. You must be told (or shown in a proof) that a theorem is true before
you can use it in a proof or otherwise.
15. Possible Answers Points E and H lie in Plane J, but 𝐸𝐹 and 𝐻𝐺 do not. Points E and
H are coplanar, but 𝐸𝐹 and 𝐻𝐺 are non-coplanar.
16. Possible Answer 𝐼𝑀, 𝐼𝐿, 𝐼𝐾, and 𝐼𝐽 have I as the endpoint, but J, K, L and M are non-
collinear.
17. True.
20. False. To make this a true statement, it should say a line segment is the set of infinitely
many collinear points between two endpoints.
21. False, by definition a point is “zero dimensional” and does not take up space.
22. True.
25. True.
Answers
For questions 1-8, your answers may vary, depending on the size of paper you printed
these questions on. These answers are for 100% on a 8.5” x 11” piece of paper.
1. 2.75 in
2. 4.9 cm
3. 4.125 in
4. 8.2 cm
B A T
5.
T A Q
7. a)
b) TA + AQ = TQ
c) TQ = 15 in
H M A
8. a)
b) HM + MA = HA
c) MA = 11 cm
M I T
9. a)
b) MI + IT = MT
c) MI = 19 cm
A B C D
10.
BC = 8 cm, BD = 25 cm, CD = 17 cm
FE = 8 in, 13 in = HG, FG = 17 in
12. x = 3, HJ = 21 units, JK = 12
14. 13 units
15. 5 units
16. 9 units
17. 5 units
18.
20. x=3
Answers
1. PS
2. 90°
3. 45°
4. 45°
5. x = 20°
6. x = 14°
7. True
8. False
10. True
Answers
B C
2. 𝑉𝑆 and 𝑄𝑇
3. 𝑉𝑆 bisects 𝑄𝑇
4. 𝑄𝑇 bisects 𝑉𝑆 You could also say that the lines bisect each other from what we know in
#3.
5. x = 12
6. (3, −5)
7. (1.5, −6)
8. (5, 5)
9. (−4.5, 2)
12. A is (6, 9)
Answers
1. m∠LMN = 32°
2. x = 15°
4. True
5. True
7. 8.
9. 10.
13. 40°
14. 122°
15. 18°
16. 87°
17. x = 10°
Answers
3. True
4. True
5. Acute
6. Obtuse
7. Obtuse
8. Acute
9. Obtuse
10. Acute
R 160°
100° P
T
O
Answers
1. 86 °
2. 1 °
3. 36 °
4. 58 °
5. 63 °
6. 90° − ( x + y )°
7. 90° − z° or (90 − z ) °
9. m∠KNJ = 27°
11. False, they can be the sum of any two angles where their sum is 90 ° .
Answers
1. 66 °
2. 169 °
3. 89 °
4. 96 °
5. 123 °
6. 180° − x° or (180 − x ) °
7. 180° − ( x + y )°
9. 117 °
10. True
11. x = 17°
12. x = 10.5°
Answers
2. True
4. True
5. False, they can form linear pairs, but not all the time.
6. x = 34°
7. 119 °
8. 147 °
9. 66 °
10. 173 °
11. 1°
Answers
2. m∠MNL = 63°
3. True
4. 64 °
5. 42 °
6. 27 °
7. 21 °
8. 32 °
9. 4°
10. 21 °
Answers
1. Acute scalene
2. Equiangular equilateral
3. Right isosceles
4. Obtuse scalene
5. Acute isosceles
6. Obtuse isosceles
7. No, because a right angle is 90 ° and an obtuse angle is greater than 90 ° . That would
be a sum greater than 180 ° and a triangle’s three angles must add up to exactly 180 ° .
8. No, same reasoning as #7. Two obtuse angles would add up to be greater than 180 ° .
9. True.
Answers
1. Concave pentagon
2. Convex octagon
3. Convex 17-gon
4. Convex decagon
5. Concave quadrilateral
6. Concave hexagon.
7. A is not a polygon because two of the sides do not meet at a vertex; B is not a polygon
because one side is curved; C is not a polygon because it is not closed.
12. True