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Angles and Polygons

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·Edexcel GCSE Mathematics·Pearson Edexcel 1MA1·6 min
G1·G3·G4

Angle Facts — Points, Lines and Vertically Opposite (G3)

These four angle rules are the foundation of all geometric reasoning:

RuleStatementSize
Angles at a pointAngles around a full turn
Angles on a straight lineAngles forming a straight line
Vertically oppositeTwo lines cross; opposite angles are equalEqual
Right angleA perpendicular junction

Worked example: angles at a point are , , and . Find .

Check:

Notation (G1): sides of triangle are labelled with lowercase letters matching the opposite vertex — side is opposite vertex . Angles are written as or .

Angles on Parallel Lines (G3)

When a transversal crosses two parallel lines (marked ), three relationships hold:

Pair typeDescriptionSize
Alternate anglesZ-shape; on opposite sides of transversalEqual
Corresponding anglesF-shape; on same side of transversalEqual
Co-interior (allied) anglesC-shape; between the parallel lines

Worked example: two parallel lines cut by a transversal. One angle is . Find the alternate angle, the corresponding angle, and the co-interior angle.

  • Alternate: (Z-pattern)
  • Corresponding: (F-pattern)
  • Co-interior: (C-pattern)

Multi-step reasoning: to find angles not in the obvious parallel-line pattern, use a combination of rules (e.g., angles on a straight line, then alternate angles) and show each step with a reason.

Angles in Triangles and Polygons (G3)

Triangle angle sum: angles in any triangle add to .

Exterior angle theorem: an exterior angle of a triangle equals the sum of the two non-adjacent interior angles.

Interior angle sum of a polygon with sides:

Exterior angle sum of any convex polygon (always).

PolygonInterior angle sumInterior angle of regular polygon
Triangle3
Quadrilateral4
Pentagon5
Hexagon6
Octagon8

Worked example — each interior angle of a regular polygon is . How many sides?

Each exterior angle . Number of sides . ✓

Properties of Special Quadrilaterals (G4)

ShapeEqual sidesParallel sidesEqual anglesDiagonals
SquareAll 42 pairsAll Equal, perpendicular bisectors
Rectangle2 pairs2 pairsAll Equal bisectors
Parallelogram2 pairs2 pairsOpposite equalBisect each other
RhombusAll 42 pairsOpposite equalPerpendicular bisectors
TrapeziumNone1 pair
Kite2 pairs adjacent01 pair oppositeOne bisects the other at

Worked example — in a parallelogram, one angle is . Find all four angles.

Opposite angles equal: two angles are . Co-interior angles are supplementary: remaining two are each.

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Properties of Triangles and Polygons (G1, G4)

Isosceles triangle: two equal sides, base angles equal.

Equilateral triangle: all sides and angles equal ( each).

Scalene triangle: no equal sides or angles.

Right-angled triangle: one angle; hypotenuse is the longest side, opposite the right angle.

Regular polygon: all sides and all angles equal.

Symmetry: a regular -gon has lines of reflective symmetry and rotational symmetry of order .

Worked example — a regular hexagon. Each interior angle . Lines of symmetry: 6. Rotational order: 6. ✓

(Extra context — a polygon is convex if all interior angles are less than 180°. Reflex interior angles produce a concave (non-convex) polygon. The interior angle sum formula works for both, provided the angles are measured correctly.)

Common Exam Mistakes

1. Alternate and co-interior confusion

Alternate angles are equal (Z-shape). Co-interior angles sum to 180° (C-shape). Confusing the two — writing equal co-interior angles or summing alternate angles — is a common error.

2. Polygon angle sum — using instead of

For a pentagon: , not . The formula subtracts 2 because the triangle fan uses triangles.

3. Regular polygon — dividing the sum by instead of

Interior angle sum of a hexagon is . Each interior angle (divide by , not ).

4. Not stating angle reasons

Exam mark schemes require reasons: write "alternate angles" or "angles on a straight line" alongside each step. A correct numerical answer without reasons loses marks in angle-proof questions.

MistakeCorrection
"Vertically opposite angles are supplementary"Vertically opposite angles are equal
"Co-interior angles are equal"Co-interior angles sum to 180°
"Interior angle sum of octagon: "

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