This MCQ module is based on: Isosceles, Equilateral Triangles and Exercises
Isosceles, Equilateral Triangles and Exercises
This mathematics assessment will be based on: Isosceles, Equilateral Triangles and Exercises
Targeting Class 7 level in General Mathematics, with Basic difficulty.
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1.3 Angles of Isosceles and Equilateral Triangles
Congruence is a very powerful tool for studying properties of geometric figures. Let us use it to discover an important property of isosceles triangles?.
Construct the altitude from A to BC. We have:
- AB = AC (given)
- \(\angle ADB = \angle ADC = 90°\) (from construction)
- AD is common to both \(\triangle ADB\) and \(\triangle ADC\)
Thus, the triangles satisfy the RHS condition. Hence, \(\triangle ADB \cong \triangle ADC\).
This shows that \(\angle B = \angle C\), as they are corresponding parts of congruent triangles.
Since \(\angle A = 80°\) and \(\angle B = \angle C\), we have \(80° + 2\angle B = 180°\), giving \(\angle B = \angle C = 50°\).
Angles in an Equilateral Triangle
Equilateral triangles? are those in which all three sides have equal lengths.
We can use the recently discovered fact that angles opposite to equal sides are equal:
- The sides AB and AC are equal. So \(\angle B = \angle C\).
- Similarly, the sides AB and BC are equal. So \(\angle A = \angle C\).
So all three angles of an equilateral triangle are equal, just like their sides. As the three angles should add up to 180°, we have:
\(3 \times \text{angle} = 180° \implies \text{each angle} = 60°\)
Congruent Triangles in Real Life
Congruent triangles can be seen in various constructions and designs from ancient to modern times. Here are a few examples:
Glass pyramid with congruent triangular panels
Four congruent triangular faces
Network of congruent triangles
Symmetric congruent triangle patterns
Congruent triangular trusses
Describe the congruent triangles you see in each picture.
Figure it Out (Section 1.3 — Exercises)
Corresponding Vertices: A ↔ F, I ↔ L, R ↔ Y
Corresponding Sides: AI = FL, IR = LY, AR = FY
Corresponding Angles: \(\angle A = \angle F\), \(\angle I = \angle L\), \(\angle R = \angle Y\)
(b) AB = EF, \(\angle A = \angle E\), AC = ED
(c) AB = DF, \(\angle B = \angle D = 90°\), AC = FE
(d) \(\angle A = \angle D\), \(\angle B = \angle E\), AC = DF
(e) AB = DF, \(\angle B = \angle F\), AC = DE
(a) AB = DE, BC = EF, CA = DF → All three sides match. SSS condition: \(\triangle ABC \cong \triangle DEF\) ✅
(b) AB = EF, \(\angle A = \angle E\), AC = ED → Two sides and included angle (the angle is at A/E, between AB-AC and EF-ED). SAS condition: \(\triangle ABC \cong \triangle EFD\) ✅
(c) AB = DF, \(\angle B = \angle D = 90°\), AC = FE → Right angle, hypotenuse AC = FE, side AB = DF. RHS condition: \(\triangle ABC \cong \triangle DFE\) ✅
(d) \(\angle A = \angle D\), \(\angle B = \angle E\), AC = DF → Two angles + non-included side. AAS condition: \(\triangle ABC \cong \triangle DEF\) ✅
(e) AB = DF, \(\angle B = \angle F\), AC = DE → Two sides and a non-included angle (SSA). SSA does NOT guarantee congruence. ❌ Not necessarily congruent.
OA = OD (given) ✓
OB = OC (given) ✓
\(\angle AOB = \angle DOC\) (vertically opposite angles) ✓
By SAS condition: \(\triangle AOB \cong \triangle DOC\)
By CPCT: \(\angle OAB = \angle ODC\)
These are alternate interior angles with AD as a transversal cutting lines AB and CD.
Since alternate interior angles are equal, AB ∥ CD. ∎
AB = AD (sides of a square) ✓
BC = DC (sides of a square) ✓
AC = AC (common diagonal) ✓
By SSS: \(\triangle ABC \cong \triangle ADC\) ✅
Is \(\triangle ABC \cong \triangle CDA\)? Note that \(\triangle CDA\) is the same triangle as \(\triangle ADC\) (just written starting from C). The correspondence here is A↔C, B↔D, C↔A. Checking: AB = CD ✓, BC = DA ✓, AC = CA ✓. Yes, \(\triangle ABC \cong \triangle CDA\) as well. In fact, in a square, the diagonal creates two congruent triangles that can be expressed in multiple equivalent ways.
By the isosceles triangle property: \(\angle B = \angle C\).
Using angle sum: \(\angle A + \angle B + \angle C = 180°\)
\(130° + 2\angle B = 180°\)
\(2\angle B = 50°\)
\(\angle B = \angle C = \mathbf{25°}\)
Strategy:
1. Identify all triangles formed by the diagonals and internal lines.
2. For each triangle, check which sides have equal marks (single | or double ||).
3. Use isosceles triangle property: angles opposite equal sides are equal.
4. Use angle sum property: angles in each triangle sum to 180°.
5. Use vertically opposite angles at intersection points.
6. Work outward from triangles with the most known angles, filling in the missing values step by step.
The key angles: 34°, 44°, 40°, 90°, 36°, 56°, 98°, 68°, 30° are distributed throughout, and each missing angle can be found using these properties in sequence.
Puzzle: Expression Engineer
Chapter Summary
- Figures that have the same shape and size are said to be congruent. These figures can be superimposed so that one fits exactly over the other via rotation/flipping.
- When two triangles have the same sidelengths, we say the SSS (Side Side Side) condition is satisfied. The SSS condition guarantees congruence.
- When two sides and the included angle of one triangle are equal to the two sides and the included angle of another triangle, we say the SAS (Side Angle Side) condition is satisfied. The SAS condition also guarantees congruence.
- When two angles and the included side of one triangle are equal to the two angles and the included side of another triangle, we say the ASA (Angle Side Angle) condition is satisfied. Congruence holds even if the side is not included between the two angles — the AAS (Angle Angle Side) condition. Congruence holds because knowing two angles determines the third.
- In a right-angled triangle, the side opposite to the right angle is called the hypotenuse. When a side and a hypotenuse of a right-angled triangle are equal to a side and the hypotenuse of another right-angled triangle, we say the RHS (Right Hypotenuse Side) condition is satisfied. This also guarantees congruence.
- Two triangles need not be congruent if two sides and a non-included angle are equal. The SSA condition does not guarantee congruence.
- In a triangle, angles opposite to equal sides are equal.
- The angles in an equilateral triangle are all 60°.
- Look around your classroom, home, or neighbourhood for congruent triangles.
- For each example, describe where you found the triangles and which congruence condition (SSS, SAS, ASA, AAS, RHS) would verify their congruence.
- Take photographs or make sketches of at least 3 examples.
- For one example, measure the sides/angles and verify the congruence condition numerically.
Examples you might find:
- Butterfly wings: The triangular patterns on opposite wings are congruent (SSS)
- Roof trusses: The triangular supports on both sides of a roof are congruent (SAS — same two beams and included angle)
- Floor tiles: Triangular tiles are manufactured to be identical (SSS)
- Bridge trusses: Like the Howrah Bridge — repeated congruent triangles for structural strength
- Folded paper: Folding a rectangular sheet along its diagonal creates two congruent right triangles (RHS)
Competency-Based Questions
Option A (SSS — 6 measurements):
Measure all 3 sides of each panel (3 + 3 = 6 measurements). If corresponding sides match: congruent. ✅ Most reliable.
Option B (SAS — 4 measurements):
Measure 2 sides + the included angle on each panel (2+1 per panel × 2 = 6 measurements). More efficient if angles are easier to measure.
Option C (Minimum — 3 measurements):
Since both panels share the same vertical pillar (common base), measure: (1) the base of panel 1, (2) the base of panel 2, and (3) one slanting edge of each. If bases are equal and slanting edges are equal, and both are isosceles (verify the other slanting edge), then SSS confirms congruence. Minimum: 3 distinct measurements (base + both slanting edges of one panel, then verify the other panel matches).
Assertion–Reason Questions
Reason (R): The altitude from A to BC divides the triangle into two congruent triangles by the RHS condition.
Reason (R): In an equilateral triangle, all sides are equal, so by the isosceles triangle property, all pairs of opposite angles are equal, and since they sum to 180°, each must be 60°.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the base angles theorem for isosceles triangles?
The base angles theorem states that in an isosceles triangle, the angles opposite the equal sides are themselves equal. If a triangle has AB equal to AC, then angle B equals angle C. This is proved by drawing a perpendicular from A to BC and using SAS congruence. NCERT Class 7 Part II Chapter 1 proves this theorem.
Why are all angles of an equilateral triangle 60 degrees?
In an equilateral triangle, all three sides are equal. By the base angles theorem, the angles opposite equal sides are equal. Since all three sides are equal, all three angles must be equal. The sum of angles in any triangle is 180 degrees, so each angle equals 60 degrees.
How do you prove two triangles congruent in exercises?
To prove congruence: identify given information, choose the appropriate criterion (SSS, SAS, ASA, AAS or RHS), list all three required equalities with reasons, and write the congruence statement with correct vertex correspondence. NCERT Class 7 Chapter 1 exercises require this structured approach.
What is the relationship between sides and angles in triangles?
In any triangle, the larger side is opposite the larger angle and vice versa. In an isosceles triangle, equal sides are opposite equal angles. These relationships help determine unknown sides and angles. NCERT Class 7 Ganita Prakash Part II explores these connections through congruence.
What types of questions come in Class 7 congruence exercises?
Class 7 congruence exercises include identifying congruent triangle pairs, stating the criterion used, finding unknown sides and angles using congruence, proving properties of isosceles and equilateral triangles, and applying congruence to solve geometric problems from NCERT Ganita Prakash Part II.
Frequently Asked Questions — Chapter 1
What is Isosceles, Equilateral Triangles and Exercises in NCERT Class 7 Mathematics?
Isosceles, Equilateral Triangles and Exercises is a key concept covered in NCERT Class 7 Mathematics, Chapter 1: Chapter 1. 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 Isosceles, Equilateral Triangles and Exercises step by step?
To solve problems on Isosceles, Equilateral Triangles and Exercises, 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 1: Chapter 1?
The essential formulas of Chapter 1 (Chapter 1) 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 Isosceles, Equilateral Triangles and Exercises important for the Class 7 board exam?
Isosceles, Equilateral Triangles and Exercises 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 Isosceles, Equilateral Triangles and Exercises?
Common mistakes in Isosceles, Equilateral Triangles and Exercises 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 Isosceles, Equilateral Triangles and Exercises?
End-of-chapter NCERT exercises for Isosceles, Equilateral Triangles and Exercises 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 1, and solve at least one previous-year board paper to consolidate your understanding.