This MCQ module is based on: Chapter 5 — Figure it Out (Exercises)
Chapter 5 — Figure it Out (Exercises)
This mathematics assessment will be based on: Chapter 5 — Figure it Out (Exercises)
Targeting Class 7 level in Geometry, with Basic difficulty.
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Chapter 5 — Figure it Out (Exercises)
The following problems bring together everything we have learned: vertically opposite angles, linear pairs, perpendicular and parallel lines, and the properties of transversals (corresponding and alternate angles).
Q1. Find the angles marked a–j (Fig. 5.30, Page 123)
\(b = 52^\circ\) (alternate/corresponding to 52°, parallels).
\(c = 99^\circ\) or \(c = 81^\circ\) — follow linear-pair (\(180 - 81 = 99^\circ\)) giving \(c = 99^\circ\).
\(d = 99^\circ\) (corresponding to 99°).
\(e = 97^\circ\) or use linear pair: \(180 - 83 = 97^\circ\); here \(e = 83^\circ\) (co-interior / follow figure).
\(f = 48^\circ\) — found using \(180 - 132 = 48^\circ\).
\(g = 58^\circ\) (vertically opposite to 58°).
\(h = 60^\circ\) or via straight-line: \(180 - 120 - ... = 60^\circ\); here \(h = 75^\circ\) computed from the given 120° and 75° markings.
\(i = 54^\circ\) (vertically opposite to 54°).
\(j\) found using exterior-angle relation from 27°, 97°, 124°: \(j = 180 - 97 + 27 - 124 = \) compute step-wise.
Students should verify each using either corresponding angles, alternate angles, vertically opposite angles, or linear-pair relations.
Q2. Find the angle represented by \(a\).
(ii) \(a = 118^\circ\) — since 62° and \(a\) are co-interior (add to 180° between the parallels).
(iii) \(a = 105^\circ\) — using transversal relations: \(a = 110^\circ - ...\) in fact \(a = 180 - 35 - 40 = 105^\circ\).
(iv) \(a = 23^\circ\) — since 67° + \(a\) = 90° at the right-angle mark (complementary to 67°).
Q3. In the figures below, what angles do \(x\) and \(y\) stand for?
(ii) \(x = 25^\circ\). Using exterior-angle relation: \(78^\circ = 53^\circ + x\) gives \(x = 25^\circ\).
Q4. In the Figure, \(\angle ABC = 45^\circ\) and \(\angle IKJ = 78^\circ\). Find \(\angle GEH, \angle HEF, \angle FED\).
\(\angle HEF = 57^\circ\) (remaining angle at E on the line: \(180° - 45° - 78° = 57°\)).
\(\angle FED = 78^\circ\) (corresponding to \(\angle IKJ = 78^\circ\)).
Q5. AB ∥ CD and CD ∥ EF; EA ⊥ AB. If ∠BEF = 55°, find x and y.
\(\angle x = \angle y = 125°\) (both corresponding angles computed from the 55° and the perpendicular, giving \(180° - 55° = 125°\)).
Q6. What is \(\angle NOP\)?
Draw a line through O parallel to LM (and PQ). This line splits \(\angle NOP\) into two parts.
The upper part equals \(96° - 40° = 56°\) using alternate angles at N.
The lower part equals \(52°\) using alternate angles at P.
So \(\angle NOP = 56° + 52° = 108°\).
Q. Figure it Out (Page 119) — Drawing a Parallel Line
Steps:
- Place the set-square so that one side lies along line \(l\).
- Hold the ruler against the other side of the set-square so that the ruler won't move.
- Slide the set-square along the ruler until one side reaches point A.
- Draw a line along the edge of the set-square through A. This new line is parallel to \(l\).
Construction Activity
- Mark three points A, B, C not on a line.
- Draw a line through A in any direction — call it \(\ell_A\).
- Using ruler + set-square sliding, draw \(\ell_B\) through B parallel to \(\ell_A\).
- Repeat for C to get \(\ell_C\).
- Verify: measure the angle each line makes with a fixed transversal; all should be equal.
The three lines are all parallel because each was drawn using the same fixed-angle sliding technique. Any transversal cuts the three at equal corresponding angles.
- Intersecting lines: Two straight lines in a plane meet at exactly one point, forming four angles.
- Linear pair: Two adjacent angles on a straight line; they sum to \(180^\circ\).
- Vertically opposite angles: Always equal. This is proven via linear pairs.
- Perpendicular lines (\(l \perp m\)): Intersect so that all four angles are \(90^\circ\).
- Parallel lines (\(l \parallel m\)): Lie in the same plane and never meet when extended. Marked with matching arrowheads.
- Transversal: A line cutting two (or more) lines at distinct points. It produces 8 angles.
- Corresponding angles: In matching positions at the two intersections. Between parallel lines they are equal.
- Alternate (interior) angles: On opposite sides of the transversal, between the two lines. Between parallel lines they are equal.
- Co-interior angles: On the same side of the transversal, between the parallels. They sum to \(180^\circ\).
- Parallel illusions: Famous visual illusions where the brain wrongly perceives parallel lines as non-parallel — only a ruler test confirms.
Competency-Based Questions (Chapter Review)
Reason (R): Co-interior angles between parallel lines always sum to 180°.
Reason (R): Two lines in the same plane that do not meet are parallel.
Reason (R): Contrasting black and white stripes cause our brain to misinterpret straight lines as curved.
Frequently Asked Questions — Parallel and Intersecting Lines
What is Part 4 — Exercises & Summary | Parallel and Intersecting Lines | Class 7 Maths Ch 5 | MyAiSchool in NCERT Class 7 Mathematics?
Part 4 — Exercises & Summary | Parallel and Intersecting Lines | Class 7 Maths Ch 5 | MyAiSchool is a key concept covered in NCERT Class 7 Mathematics, Chapter 5: Parallel and Intersecting Lines. This lesson builds the student's foundation in the chapter by explaining the core ideas with worked examples, definitions, and step-by-step methods aligned to the CBSE curriculum.
How do I solve problems on Part 4 — Exercises & Summary | Parallel and Intersecting Lines | Class 7 Maths Ch 5 | MyAiSchool step by step?
To solve problems on Part 4 — Exercises & Summary | Parallel and Intersecting Lines | Class 7 Maths Ch 5 | MyAiSchool, follow the NCERT method: identify the given quantities, choose the relevant formula or theorem, substitute values carefully, and simplify. Class 7 exercises gradually increase in difficulty — start with solved NCERT examples before attempting exercise questions, and always verify your answer by substitution or diagram.
What are the most important formulas for Chapter 5: Parallel and Intersecting Lines?
The essential formulas of Chapter 5 (Parallel and Intersecting Lines) are listed in the chapter summary and highlighted throughout the lesson in formula boxes. Memorise them and practise at least 2–3 problems per formula. CBSE board exams frequently test direct application as well as combined use of multiple formulas from this chapter.
Is Part 4 — Exercises & Summary | Parallel and Intersecting Lines | Class 7 Maths Ch 5 | MyAiSchool important for the Class 7 board exam?
Part 4 — Exercises & Summary | Parallel and Intersecting Lines | Class 7 Maths Ch 5 | MyAiSchool is part of the NCERT Class 7 Mathematics syllabus and appears in CBSE board exams. Questions typically include short-answer, long-answer, and competency-based items. Review the NCERT examples, exercise questions, and previous-year board problems on this topic to prepare confidently.
What mistakes should students avoid in Part 4 — Exercises & Summary | Parallel and Intersecting Lines | Class 7 Maths Ch 5 | MyAiSchool?
Common mistakes in Part 4 — Exercises & Summary | Parallel and Intersecting Lines | Class 7 Maths Ch 5 | MyAiSchool include skipping steps, misapplying formulas, sign errors, and losing track of units. Write each step clearly, double-check algebraic manipulations, and re-read the question after solving to verify that your answer matches what was asked.
Where can I find more NCERT practice questions on Part 4 — Exercises & Summary | Parallel and Intersecting Lines | Class 7 Maths Ch 5 | MyAiSchool?
End-of-chapter NCERT exercises for Part 4 — Exercises & Summary | Parallel and Intersecting Lines | Class 7 Maths Ch 5 | MyAiSchool cover all difficulty levels tested in CBSE exams. After completing them, try the examples again without looking at the solutions, attempt the NCERT Exemplar questions for Chapter 5, and solve at least one previous-year board paper to consolidate your understanding.