THIS

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THIS. IS. Jeopardy. Your. With. Host. Mrs. Keenan. Jeopardy. You should see the view from here, Net(a)!. Is a Square just a Square?. Anglers Choice. The 3 rd Dimension. Geo. Splash. Tri- it out!. 100. 100. 100. 100. 100. 100. 200. 200. 200. 200. 200. 200. 300. 300. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of THIS

THIS

IS

With

Host...

Your

100 100 100 100 100 100

200 200 200 200 200 200

300 300 300 300 300 300

400 400 400 400 400 400

500 500 500 500 500 500

Anglers Choice

Tri- it out!Is a Square

just a Square?

The 3rd Dimension

Geo. SplashYou should see the view from here, Net(a)!

An angle that measures less

than 90º

A 100

Acute Angle

A 100

An angle that measures

exactly 180º

A 200

Straight Angle

A 200

The supplementary angle to an angle

measuring 43º

A 300

137º

A 300

The type of angle shown here:

A 400

Obtuse angle

A 400

The measure of two congruent angles,

that together would be complementary

angles.A 500

45º

A 500

The two ways a triangle can be

named.

B 100

By it’s angles and measures of

it’s sides

B 100

The type of triangle shown below:

B 200

Acute Scalene

B 200

The measures of all the angles inside an equilateral triangle.

B 300

60º

B 300

The type of triangle shown here:

B 400

Obtuse Isosceles

B 400

In an Obtuse Isosceles Triangle, two of the

angles measure 43º and 94º, the measure of the

third angle is this.B 500

43º

B 500

Any 4-sided polygon is called this.

C 100

Quadrilateral

C 100

A 4-sided polygon, with exactly one set

of parallel lines.

C 200

Trapezoid

C 200

A 4-sided polygon whose

opposite sides are congruent and

parallelC 300

Parallelogram

C 300

DAILY DOUBLE

C 400

DAILY DOUBLE

Place A Wager

A 4-sided polygon that is equilateral and

equiangular

C 400

Square

C 400

The 4 angles inside all 4-sided polygons

add up to this.

C 500

360º

C 500

A 3-dimensional figure with flat plane surfaces.

D 100

Polyhedron

D 100

The number of vertices on the figure shown

below:

D 200

5

D 200

A 3-dimensional figure with 6 square faces

D 300

cube

D 300

Three examples discussed in class of Non-Polyhedrons.

D 400

Cone, Sphere, & Cylinder

D 400

The number of edges shown on the figure

below:

D 500

27

D 500

A 2-dimensional pattern that can be folded to form a 3-dimensional figure.

E 100

Net

E 100

Geometry term meaning exactly

the same.

E 200

Congruent

E 200

The term used to describe a polygon

with congruent sides and angles.

E 300

Regular

E 300

A geometry term meaning all angles

are congruent.

E 400

Equiangular

E 400

A 7-sided polygon.

E 500

Heptagon

E 500

The 3-dimensional figure that will be made

with the net below:

F 100

Pentagonal Pyramid

F 100

This 3-dimensional figure from the side and front looks like a triangle and from the top you can see the circular base and the

single vertex.F 200

Cone

F 200

No matter what perspective you view this polyhedron from

you will see a rectangle.

F 300

Rectangular Prism

F 300

The 3-dimensional figure that will be made with the

net below:

F 400

Cylinder

F 400

The net of this 3-dimensional figure is composed of 4

triangles.

F 500

Triangular Pyramid

F 500

The Final Jeopardy Category is:

PolygonsPlease record your wager.

Click on screen to begin

List three things a polygon can have

or cannot have that classifies it as a

polygon.Click on screen to continue

-Cannot have curves (straight sides)

-Must be closed (can’t be open)

-Must have at least three sides

-Must be “simple” (no intersections, criss-crosses)

Click on screen to continue

Thank You for Playing Jeopardy!

Game Designed By C. Harr-MAIT