Answer:
Angles opposite one another that share a vertex are called <u>vertical</u> angles.
When one of these angles undergo a rigid transformation so that it fits exactly over the other, we know that the two angles are <u>congruent</u>
When two parallel lines are crossed by another line called the <u>transversal</u> the angles created inside the parallel lines but on opposite sides of the crossing lines are called <u>alternate</u> <u>interior</u> angles. Angles of this type have the same measurement as one another. Two figures are <u>similar</u> if one can fit exactly over the other after rigid transformations and dilations
Step-by-step explanation:
Vertically opposite angles are always equal (congruent)
The transversal line is the line that crosses two or more parallel lines
Alternate interior angles formed by two parallel lines crossed by a common transversal, are congruent
Two plane geometric figures are similar if they their corresponding interior angles are congruent