Pythagoras: Finding right-angled triangles

Pythagoras: Finding right-angled triangles

Lesson details

Key learning points

  1. In this lesson, we will learn how to use Pythagoras's theorem to find the height of triangles with and without right angles.

Licence

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6 Questions

Q1.
Which side the the hypotenuse of the below triangle?
LM
LN
Correct answer: MN
Q2.
The digram shows a right-angled triangle. Which of the statements is correct?
Correct answer: A
B
C
D
Q3.
Which equation does NOT relate to the triangle show below?
A
B
C
Correct answer: D
Q4.
Work out the length of the hypotenuse of the triangle shown below.
14 cm
25 cm
Correct answer: 5 cm
7 cm
Q5.
Find the length of the missing side of the right-angled triangle.
2 cm
3 cm
Correct answer: 4 cm
Q6.
Use Pythagoras’ Theorem to determine which of the sets of numbers below are Pythagorean triples:
2, 3, 4
4, 5, 6
Correct answer: 6, 8, 10

7 Questions

Q1.
Which side the the hypotenuse of the below triangle?
Correct answer: m
n
p
Q2.
The digram shows a right-angled triangle. What is the length of the hypotenuse?
√10 cm
Correct answer: √13
10 cm
13
Q3.
The right-angled triangle ABC has short sides of length 8 cm and 4 cm. Find the length of AC.
Correct answer: √80
12 cm
48 cm
80 cm
Q4.
Use Pythagoras’ Theorem to determine which of the sets of numbers below are Pythagorean triples:
2, 3, 4
Correct answer: 3, 4, 5
5, 6, 7
Q5.
Sandra tried to calculate the unknown length. What mistake has she made in Step 1?
Correct answer: She did not identify the hypotenuse correctly.
She did not need to square the numbers.
She should have written 6 + 10 = x squared.
Q6.
Sandra tried to calculate the unknown length. What mistake has she made in Step 2?
Made a mistake with re arranging the equation.
Mixed up the hypotenuse and shorter side lengths.
Correct answer: She doubled the sides instead of squaring.
Q7.
What do you need to do in order to find the area of the triangle shown below.
Find the length of the perpendicular height using Pythagoras then multiply by 32.
Find the length of the perpendicular height using Pythagoras then multiply by 68
Correct answer: Find the length of the perpendicular height using Pythagoras, multiply by 32 then divide by 2.
Multiply 32 x 68 then divide by 2.

Lesson appears in

UnitMaths / Pythagoras's theorem