menuGamaTrain
search
chevron_backward

Parallel lines

chevron_forward
visibility 75update 6 months agobookmarkshare

🎯 In this topic you will

  • Use geometric vocabulary for equal angles formed when lines intersect.
 

🧠 Key Words

  • alternate angles
  • corresponding angles
  • geometric
  • transversal
  • vertically opposite angles
Show Definitions
  • alternate angles: Angles that lie on opposite sides of a transversal and inside the two lines, and are equal if the lines are parallel.
  • corresponding angles: Angles that are in the same position on two lines in relation to a transversal, and are equal if the lines are parallel.
  • geometric: Related to the properties, measurement, and relationships of points, lines, angles, and shapes.
  • transversal: A line that crosses two or more other lines at different points.
  • vertically opposite angles: Angles that are opposite each other when two lines intersect, and are always equal.
 

This diagram shows two straight lines.

Angles $a$ and $c$ are equal. They are called vertically opposite angles.

Angles $b$ and $d$ are equal. They are also vertically opposite angles.

Vertically opposite angles are equal.

Angles $a$ and $b$ are not equal (unless they are both $90^\circ$).

They add up to $180^\circ$ because they are angles on a straight line.

 

 

The arrows on this diagram show that these two lines are parallel. The perpendicular distance between parallel lines is the same wherever you measure it.

Here, there is a third straight line crossing two parallel lines. It is called a transversal.

Where the transversal crosses the parallel lines, four angles are formed.

Angles $a$ and $e$ are called corresponding angles. Angles $d$ and $h$ are also corresponding angles. So are $b$ and $f$. So are $c$ and $g$.

Corresponding angles are equal.

Angles $d$ and $f$ are called alternate angles. Angles $c$ and $e$ are also alternate angles.

Alternate angles are equal.

These are important properties of parallel lines.

To help you remember:

  • for vertically opposite angles, think of the letter X
  • for corresponding angles, think of the letter F
  • for alternate angles, think of the letter Z

 

 

🧠 PROBLEM-SOLVING Strategy

Angles in Parallel Lines and Shapes

Use these steps to solve problems involving angles in parallel lines, triangles, quadrilaterals, and trapeziums.

  1. Identify the parallel lines and transversals
    Look for arrow markings that indicate parallel lines. Find any transversal lines crossing them.
  2. Label all given and related angles
    Write down known angle sizes and assign letters or symbols to unknown angles for reference.
  3. Recall the key angle rules for parallel lines
    • Corresponding angles are equal (same position at each intersection).
    • Alternate angles are equal (Z-shape positions).
    • Co-interior angles add up to $180^\circ$ (C-shape positions).
    • Vertically opposite angles are always equal (lines crossing).
  4. Apply angle rules step-by-step
    Start with angles directly linked to the given information, then work logically to the target angle.
  5. Use angle sums for shapes
    • In a triangle, angles add to $180^\circ$.
    • In a quadrilateral, angles add to $360^\circ$.
    • Use parallel line rules inside shapes to find missing angles.
  6. Write proofs with clear reasons
    For geometric proofs, extend lines to form parallel line diagrams and state the rule used for each equality.
  7. Check your work
    Ensure all found angles satisfy the relevant shape angle sums and that each step has a valid reason.
 

EXERCISES

1. Look at the diagram.

a. Write four pairs of corresponding angles.

b. Write two pairs of alternate angles.

👀 Show answer
a. $(p, t), (q, u), (s, w), (r, v)$
b. $(q, w), (s, u)$

2.

a. One angle of $62^\circ$ is marked in the diagram.

Copy and complete these sentences.

i. Because corresponding angles are equal, angle $\_\_$ = $62^\circ$

ii. Because alternate angles are equal, angle $\_\_$ = $62^\circ$

b. Write the letters of a pair of vertically opposite angles.

👀 Show answer
a. i. $b$ = $62^\circ$
a. ii. $d$ = $62^\circ$
b. $(a, c)$
 

EXERCISES

3. The sizes of two angles are marked in the diagram.

a. Which other angles are $105^\circ$?

b. Which other angles are $75^\circ$?

👀 Show answer
a. $r$, $t$
b. $q$, $u$

4. Angle $APY$ is marked on the diagram.
Complete these sentences.

a. $APY$ and $CQY$ are .................... angles.

b. $APY$ and $XQD$ are .................... angles.

c. $APX$ and ........ are corresponding angles.

d. $CQX$ and ........ are alternate angles.

e. $CQP$ and ........ are vertically opposite angles.

👀 Show answer
a. Corresponding
b. Vertically opposite
c. $CQY$
d. $APX$
e. $XQD$

5. PQ and RS are parallel lines.
Find the sizes of angles $a$, $b$, $c$ and $d$.
Give a reason in each case.

👀 Show answer
$a = 44^\circ$ (supplementary to $136^\circ$)
$b = 136^\circ$ (vertically opposite to $c$)
$c = 136^\circ$ (corresponding to given $136^\circ$)
$d = 44^\circ$ (alternate to $a$)

6. Look at this diagram.
Explain why AB and CD cannot be parallel lines.

👀 Show answer
If AB and CD were parallel, alternate angles would be equal, but $50^\circ \neq 40^\circ$, so the lines cannot be parallel.
 

EXERCISES

7. This diagram has three parallel lines and a transversal.

a. Write a set of three corresponding angles that includes angle $f$.

b. Write a pair of alternate angles that includes angle $c$.

c. Write another pair of alternate angles that includes angle $c$.

👀 Show answer
7a. Corresponding angles through the three intersections: $(b,\, f,\, j)$.
7b. Alternate angles including $c$: $(c,\, e)$.
7c. Another alternate pair including $c$: $(c,\, g)$.

8. Look at this diagram.
Write whether these are corresponding angles, alternate angles or neither.

a. $a$ and $d$

b. $b$ and $f$

c. $c$ and $g$

d. $d$ and $e$

e. $a$ and $h$

👀 Show answer
8a. Corresponding angles.
8b. Corresponding angles.
8c. Corresponding angles.
8d. Alternate angles.
8e. Alternate angles.
 

🧠 Think like a Mathematician

Scenario: Arun gives this explanation of why angles h and d are equal:

h = b because they are corresponding angles.
b = d because they are alternate angles.
Therefore h = d.

Tasks:

  1. Arun’s explanation is not correct. Write a correct version of the explanation.
  2. Write a different explanation of why h = d that does not use corresponding angles.
👀 Show answer
  • 1: Correct explanation: h = f because they are alternate angles. f = d because they are vertically opposite angles. Therefore, h = d.
  • 2: Alternative explanation without using corresponding angles: h and f are alternate angles, so they are equal. f and d are vertically opposite angles, so they are equal. Hence, h = d.
 

EXERCISES

10. AB and CD are parallel.

a. Give a reason why $a$ and $d$ are equal.

b. Give a reason why $b$ and $e$ are equal.

c. Use your answers to a and b to show that the sum of the angles of triangle $ABC$ must be $180^\circ$.

👀 Show answer
a. $a$ and $d$ are equal because they are alternate angles.
b. $b$ and $e$ are equal because they are alternate angles.
c. $a b c = 180^\circ$ because they form the angles of triangle $ABC$.

11. Show that the sum of the angles of triangle $XYZ$ must be $180^\circ$.

💡 Tip

Use your answer to Question 10 as a guide.

👀 Show answer
By drawing a parallel line through one vertex and using alternate and corresponding angles, it can be shown that the three interior angles add to $180^\circ$.
 
 

EXERCISES

💡 Tip

Extend the sides of the parallelogram.

12. $ABCD$ is a parallelogram.

a. Show that opposite angles of the parallelogram are equal.

b. Compare your answer to part $a$ with a partner’s answer. Can you improve his or her answer? Can you improve your own answer?

👀 Show answer
13a. In a parallelogram opposite sides are parallel. Extend a side to form a transversal with the opposite side. Then pairs of interior angles on the same side of a transversal are supplementary, so each angle equals the exterior adjacent angle at the opposite vertex. Hence the interior angles at opposite vertices are equal (alternate/corresponding angle relationships with parallel lines).

13b. A strong explanation should (i) state which sides are parallel, (ii) name the angle relationships used (alternate, corresponding, or interior–supplementary), and (iii) conclude explicitly that $\angle A = \angle C$ and $\angle B = \angle D$. Improve by adding a clear diagram marking the transversals and citing the angle facts used.
 

🧠 Think like a Mathematician

13. $ABCD$ is a trapezium. Two sides are extended to make the triangle $AXB$.

a. Show that the angles of triangles $ABX$ and $DCX$ are the same size.

b. Show that angles $A$ and $D$ of the trapezium add up to $180^\circ$.

c. What can you say about angles $B$ and $C$ of the trapezium? Give a reason for your answer.

 

👀 show answer
  • a: Since $AB \parallel DC$, angle correspondences hold: $\angle ABX = \angle DCX$ and $\angle AXB = \angle DXC$ (alternate/corresponding angles with parallel lines). The third angles then match as well, so triangles $ABX$ and $DCX$ have the same angles (they are similar).
  • b: Line $AD$ is a transversal of the parallels $AB$ and $DC$. Interior angles on the same side are supplementary, so $\angle A \angle D = 180^\circ$.
  • c: Similarly, with transversal $BC$, interior angles give $\angle B \angle C = 180^\circ$ (co-interior angles on parallel lines).
 

📘 What we've learned

  • We learned the definitions of corresponding, alternate, co-interior, and vertically opposite angles.
  • We proved that corresponding angles and alternate angles are equal when lines are parallel.
  • We showed that co-interior angles add up to $180^\circ$.
  • We applied angle rules to solve for unknown angles in triangles, quadrilaterals, and trapeziums involving parallel lines.
  • We used logical step-by-step reasoning to justify angle relationships with clear statements of the rules applied.
 
 
 
 

Related Past Papers

Related Tutorials

warning Crash report
home
grid_view
add
explore
account_circle