1 / 21

Geometric Book

Geometric Book. Tareah Meeks April 10,2013 Obj: I will create a digit product while integrating two or more technology tools. Acute Triangle. A  triangle  for which all  interior angles are acute. Altitude of an Cone.

elon
Download Presentation

Geometric Book

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. Geometric Book Tareah Meeks April 10,2013 Obj: I will create a digit product while integrating two or more technology tools.

  2. Acute Triangle A triangle for which all interior anglesare acute.

  3. Altitude of an Cone The distance from the apex of a cone to the base. Formally, the shortest line segment between the apex of a cone and the (possibly extended) base. Altitude also refers to the length of this segment

  4. Base In plane geometry or solid geometry, the bottom of a figure. If the top is parallel to the bottom (as in a trapezoidor prism), both the top and bottom are called bases.

  5. Between Point B is between points A and C if it is on the line segment connecting A and C.

  6. Box A box shape in three dimensional figure. Formally, a polyhedron for which allfaces are rectangles.

  7. Cone A threedimensionalfigure with a single base tapering to an apex. The base can be any simple closed curve. Often the word cone refers to a right circular cone.

  8. Cube A regular polyhedron for which all faces are squares. Note: It is one of the five platonic solids.

  9. Cylinder A three-dimensional geometric figure withparallel congruentbases. The bases can be shaped like any closed plane figure (not necessarily a circle) and must be oriented identically.

  10. Double Cone A geometric figure made up of two right circular cones placed apex to apex as shown below. Typically a double cone is considered to extend infinitely far in both directions, especially when working with conic sections anddegenerate conic sections.

  11. Kite A quadrilateral with two pairs of adjacent sidesthat arecongruent. Note that the diagonals of a kite are perpendicular.

  12. Octagon A polygon with eight sides.

  13. Parallel Lines Two distinctcoplanar lines that do not intersect. Note: Parallel lines have the same slope.

  14. Pentagon A polygon with five sides.

  15. Prism A solid withparallel congruentbases  which are both polygons. The bases must be oriented identically. The lateral faces of a prism are all parallelograms or  rectangles.

  16. Pyramid A polyhedron with a polygonalbase and  lateral faces that taper to an apex. A pyramid with a triangular base is called a tetrahedron.

  17. Ray A part of a line starting at a particular point and extending infinitely in one direction.

  18. Reflection A transformation in which a geometric figureis reflected across a line, creating a mirror image. That line is called the axis of reflection.

  19. Similar Identical in shape, although not necessarily the same size.

  20. Sphere A threedimensional solid consisting of all points  equidistant from a given point.

  21. Square A rectangle with all four sides of equal length. Formally, a square is a quadrilateral with four congruent sides and four congruent  angles (all 90°).

More Related