Answer:
a) linear pair angles: 1&2, 2&3, 3&4, 1&4... etc (any angles that are adjacent, or right next, to each other that add up to be 180 degrees)
b) All linear pair angles are adjacent angles but not all adjacent angles are linear pairs. So pick any linear pair angle you got because they will always be adjacent. (1&2, 2&3, 3&4, 1&4... etc)
c) vertically opposite angles: 1&3, 2&4, 5&7, 6&8, 9&11, 10&12
Step-by-step explanation:
Hello from MrBillDoesMath!
Answer: SAS = side - angle -side congruence
SSS = side - side - side congruence
Discussion
:
In Plane Geometry, identical triangles are said to be "congruent". There are several ways, depending upon the information you have, to prove 2 triangles are congruent.
In one approach ("SSS") if you can show that 2 triangles have identical side lengths, then the triangles are congruent. (A triangle has 3 sides, hence "SSS" -- 3 S's; 3 sides, get it?)
In another approach ("SAS") if you can show that 2 sides, and the angle included between those sides, in one triangle are identical to the sides and included angle in another triangle, then the triangles are congruent
It's easier to understand this with a picture or diagram than in words. Please review the SSS, SAS picture in your textbook
Regards, MrB
The slope will be -1/2. If you put it into slope intercept form of y=mx+b, mx will always be the slope.