High school (9–12)
Math
Geometry: Angles & Triangles: Standard Practice
Free high school geometry practice for angles and triangles. Review complementary and supplementary angles, the triangle sum theorem, exterior angles, and classifying triangles by sides and angles. Grade-level practice aligned to typical classroom expectations and unit assessments.
Medium Level Guide
Grade-level practice aligned to typical classroom expectations and unit assessments.
Basic Angle Relationships
Complementary angles sum to 90 degrees. Supplementary angles sum to 180 degrees. Vertical angles formed by intersecting lines are congruent. Adjacent angles share a vertex and side.
Parallel Lines and Transversals
When a transversal crosses parallel lines, corresponding angles are congruent. Alternate interior angles are congruent. Same-side interior angles are supplementary. These relationships solve for unknown angles.
Triangle Sum and Exterior Angles
The interior angles of any triangle sum to 180 degrees. An exterior angle equals the sum of the two remote interior angles. This follows from extending a side and using linear pairs.
Classifying Triangles
By sides: scalene (no equal sides), isosceles (two equal), equilateral (three equal). By angles: acute (all under 90°), right (one 90°), obtuse (one over 90°). The Pythagorean theorem applies only to right triangles.
FAQ
- Does this include proofs?
- Content supports proof reasoning about angle sums, but questions focus on calculation and classification.
- Is trigonometry included?
- This pack stays with angle relationships and triangle properties. Trigonometry ratios appear in a separate pack.