4-2: Congruency Postulates. What do we know about congruency so far? A B C D E F G H All...

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4-2: Congruency Postulates

Transcript of 4-2: Congruency Postulates. What do we know about congruency so far? A B C D E F G H All...

Page 1: 4-2: Congruency Postulates. What do we know about congruency so far? A B C D E F G H All corresponding sides and angles must be equal for the two shapes.

4-2: Congruency Postulates

Page 2: 4-2: Congruency Postulates. What do we know about congruency so far? A B C D E F G H All corresponding sides and angles must be equal for the two shapes.

What do we know about congruency so far?

A

B C

D E

F G

H

All corresponding sides and angles must be equal for the two shapes to be congruent!

Page 3: 4-2: Congruency Postulates. What do we know about congruency so far? A B C D E F G H All corresponding sides and angles must be equal for the two shapes.

Side-Side-Side Postulate

If the 3 sides of one triangle are congruent to the three sides of another triangle, then the two triangles are congruent.

H

G F

Q

RP

Page 4: 4-2: Congruency Postulates. What do we know about congruency so far? A B C D E F G H All corresponding sides and angles must be equal for the two shapes.

Given: HF = HJ, FG = JK, H is the midpoint of GK.~ ~

Prove: Triangle FGH = Triangle JKH~

G

F

H

J

K

By the midpoint definition,

GH = KH

∆FGH = ∆JKH by SSS.

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Page 5: 4-2: Congruency Postulates. What do we know about congruency so far? A B C D E F G H All corresponding sides and angles must be equal for the two shapes.

Side-Angle-Side (SAS) Postulate

If two sides and the included angle of one triangle are congruent to two sides and the included angle of another triangle, then the two triangles are congruent.

A

B

C

D

E

F

Page 6: 4-2: Congruency Postulates. What do we know about congruency so far? A B C D E F G H All corresponding sides and angles must be equal for the two shapes.

From the information given, can you proveTriangle RED = Triangle CAT? Explain.~

R E

D

C A

T

Given: RE = CA, RD = CT, ‹R = ‹T

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No, cannot prove congruency.

∆CAT does not have the included angle between the two sides. Not SAS.

Page 7: 4-2: Congruency Postulates. What do we know about congruency so far? A B C D E F G H All corresponding sides and angles must be equal for the two shapes.

From the information given, can you proveTriangle AEB = Triangle DBC? Explain.

A

B C

D

E

Given: EB = CB, AE = DB~ ~

By the definition of vertical angles,‹ABE = ‹DBC.

No, cannot prove congruency.

∆AEB does not have the included angle between the two sides. Not SAS.

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