Across
- 5. the length of the opposite side divided by the length of the adjacent side
- 6. 8-sided polygon
- 10. variable P
- 12. 6-sided polygon
- 14. 12-sided polygon
- 16. variable Q
- 17. having sides unequal in length
- 20. line which passes through a vertex of a triangle, and meets the opposite side at right angles
- 24. quadrilateral with exactly one pair of parallel sides
- 26. having a common vertex and common side
- 27. 5-sided polygon
- 28. equal to 180 degrees
- 29. 9-sided polygon
- 30. line meeting another line at a right angle
- 32. equal to 90 degrees
- 36. any 4-sided polygon
- 37. has at least 2 equal sides
- 39. reverse of a conditional
- 40. parallelogram with 4 right angles
- 41. distance around a 2D shape
Down
- 1. when one shape becomes exactly like another if you flip, slide or turn it
- 2. straight, continuous arrangement of infinite points
- 3. logical series of statements and corresponding reasons that start with a hypothesis and end with a conclusion
- 4. the longest side of a right triangle, opposite the right angle
- 7. 3-sided polygon
- 8. parallelogram with 4 congruent sides
- 9. closed figure consisting of segments called sides, which intersect with other sides at their endpoints forming vertices
- 11. polygon with at least one interior angle that measures > 180
- 13. trigonometric function that is equal to the ratio of the side adjacent to an acute angle (in a right-angled triangle) to the hypotenuse.
- 15. statement that can be written in the form "if P, then Q"
- 18. points located on the same line
- 19. quadrilateral with 2 pairs of adjacent, congruent sides
- 21. 7-sided polygon
- 22. starts one place and extends in one direction infinitely
- 23. parallelogram with 4 right angles
- 25. specific examples showing that a generic statement is untrue
- 31. 2+ lines located on the same plane
- 33. a quadrilateral with 2 pairs of parallel sides
- 34. line that passes through two lines in the same plane at two distinct points
- 35. each angular point of a polygon, polyhedron, or other figure
- 38. statement that can be proven