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PYTHAGOREAN THEOREM

TRIGO 1
ANGLES OBLIQUE TRIANGLES
FORMULAS
DEFINITION OF TERMS
● Acute Angle - angle less than 90°
B
● Right Angle - angle equal to 90°
● Obtuse Angle - angle greater than
90° c a
● Straight Angle - angle equal to 180°
● Reflex Angle - angle greater than A C
180° b
SINE LAW
● Complementary Angles - 2 angles
whose sum is 90°
● Supplementary Angles - 2 angles
whose sum is 180°
● Explementary Angles - 2 angles COSINE LAW
whose sum is 360°
● Amplitude (A) - greatest distance of
any point on the graph from a
horizontal line which passes halfway
between the max and min values of
the function
● Period (T) - interval over which the FUNDAMENTAL
graph of a function repeats
RELATIONS

RECIPROCAL RELATIONS:
ANGLES OF MEASUREMENTS

RIGHT TRIANGLE
FORMULAS
QUOTIENT RELATIONS:

c a
A
b

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PYTHAGOREAN RELATIONS: ANGLE BISECTOR
➔ line drawn from one vertex to the
opposite side bisecting the included
angle

ANGLE BISECTOR THEOREM


IDENTITIES ➔ an angle bisector of a triangle
divides the opposite side into two
COFUNCTION IDENTITIES: segments that are proportional to the
other two adjacent sides

INCENTER
➔ center of the inscribed circle
SUM OF TWO ANGLES ➔ point of intersection of the angle
bisectors of the triangle

DIFFERENCE OF TWO ANGLES

CIRCUMCENTER
➔ center of a circumscribed circle
➔ the point of intersection of the
perpendicular bisectors

DOUBLE ANGLE

HALF ANGLE

ESCRIBED CIRCLE
➔ A circle is “escribed” about a
triangle if it is tangent to one side

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and to the prolongation of the other
two sides

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MEDIANS OF A TRIANGLE
TRIGO 2

AREA OF TRIANGLE
B

c h a

A b C
A. Given the base and altitude

B. Given two sides and


included angle

C. Given three sides


(Heron’s Formula)

D. Given three angles and one


side

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