1 / 23

7-7

7-7. Polygons. Course 1. Warm Up. Problem of the Day. Lesson Presentation. 7-7. Polygons. Course 1. Warm Up True or false? 1. Some trapezoids are parallelograms. 2. Some figures with 4 right angles are squares. false. true. 7-7. Polygons. Course 1. Problem of the Day

larrydavis
Download Presentation

7-7

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. 7-7 Polygons Course 1 Warm Up Problem of the Day Lesson Presentation

  2. 7-7 Polygons Course 1 Warm Up True or false? 1.Some trapezoids are parallelograms. 2. Some figures with 4 right angles are squares. false true

  3. 7-7 Polygons Course 1 Problem of the Day Four square tables pushed together can seat either 8 or 10 people. How many people could 12 square tables pushed together seat? 14, 16, 18, or 26 people

  4. 7-7 Polygons Course 1 Learn to identify regular and not regular polygons and to find the angle measures of regular polygons.

  5. 7-7 Polygons Course 1 Insert Lesson Title Here Vocabulary polygon regular polygon

  6. 7-7 Polygons Course 1 Triangles and quadrilaterals are examples of polygons. A polygon is a closed plane figure formed by three or more line segments. A regular polygon is a polygon in which all sides are congruent and all angles are congruent. Polygons are named by the number of their sides and angles.

  7. 7-7 Polygons Course 1

  8. 7-7 Polygons Course 1 Additional Example 1A: Identifying Polygons Tell whether each shape is a polygon. If so, give its name and tell whether it appears to be regular or not regular. A. The shape is a closed plane figure formed by 3 or more line segments. polygon There are 5 sides and 5 angles. pentagon All 5 sides do not appear to be congruent. Not regular

  9. 7-7 Polygons Course 1 Additional Example 1B: Identifying Polygons Tell whether each shape is a polygon. If so, give its name and tell whether it appears to be regular or not regular. B. The shape is a closed plane figure formed by 3 or more line segments. polygon There are 8 sides and 8 angles. octagon The sides and angles appear to be congruent. regular

  10. 7-7 Polygons Course 1 Try This: Example 1A Tell whether each shape is a polygon. If so, give its name and tell whether it appears to be regular or not regular. A. There are 4 sides and 4 angles. quadrilateral The sides and angles appear to be congruent. regular

  11. 7-7 Polygons Course 1 Try This: Example 1B Tell whether each shape is a polygon. If so, give its name and tell whether it appears to be regular or not regular. B. There are 4 sides and 4 angles. quadrilateral All 4 sides do not appear to be congruent. regular

  12. 7-7 Polygons Course 1 The sum of the interior angle measures in a triangle is 180°, so the sum of the interior angle measures in a quadrilateral is 360°.

  13. 7-7 Polygons 1 Understand the Problem Course 1 Additional Example 2: Problem Solving Application Malcolm designed a wall hanging that was a regular 9-sided polygon (called a nonagon). What is the measure of each angle of the nonagon? • The answer will be the measure of each angle in a nonagon. • List the important information: • A regular nonagon has 9 congruent sides and 9 congruent angles.

  14. 7-7 Polygons 3 Solve Make a Plan 2 Course 1 Additional Example 2 Continued Make a table to look for a pattern using regular polygons. Draw some regular polygons and divide each into triangles.

  15. 7-7 Polygons 720° Course 1 Additional Example 2 Continued

  16. 7-7 Polygons Course 1 Additional Example 2 Continued The number of triangles is always 2 fewer than the number of sides. A nonagon can be divided into 9 – 2 = 7 triangles. The sum of the interior angle measures in a nonagon is 7  180° = 1,260°. So the measure of each angle is 1,260° ÷ 9 = 140°.

  17. 7-7 Polygons 4 Course 1 Additional Example 2 Continued Look Back Each angle in a nonagon is obtuse. 140° is a reasonable answer, because an obtuse angle is between 90° and 180°.

  18. 7-7 Polygons 1 Understand the Problem Course 1 Try This: Additional Example 2 Sara designed a picture that was a regular 6-sided polygon (called a hexagon). What is the measure of each angle of the hexagon? • The answer will be the measure of each angle in a hexagon. • List the important information: • A regular hexagon has 6 congruent sides and 6 congruent angles.

  19. 7-7 Polygons 3 Solve Make a Plan 2 Course 1 Try This: Example 2 Continued Make a table to look for a pattern using regular polygons. Draw some regular polygons and divide each into triangles.

  20. 7-7 Polygons Course 1 Try This: Example 2 Continued

  21. 7-7 Polygons Course 1 Try This: Example 2 Continued The number of triangles is always 2 fewer than the number of sides. A hexagon can be divided into 6 – 2 = 4 triangles. The sum of the interior angles in a octagon is 4  180° = 720°. So the measure of each angle is 720° ÷ 6 = 120°.

  22. 7-7 Polygons 4 Course 1 Try This: Example 2 Continued Look Back Each angle in a hexagon is obtuse. 120° is a reasonable answer, because an obtuse angle is between 90° and 180°.

  23. 7-7 Polygons Course 1 Insert Lesson Title Here Lesson Quiz 1. Name each polygon and tell whether it appears to be regular or not regular. 2. What is the measure of each angle in a regular dodecagon (12-sided figure)? nonagon, regular; octagon, not regular 150°

More Related