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8 – Ch.

5 – Exam Prep Name _______________________________________


Hour ________

Lesson 5.1 Practice Lines


In the figure, line 𝒎 and line 𝒏 are parallel. If 𝒎∠𝟑 = 𝟔𝟒˚, find each angle measure. Justify each answer.
1) 𝑚∠8

2) 𝑚∠10

3) 𝑚∠4

Lesson 5.3 Practice Angles of Triangles


Find the value of 𝒙 in each triangle.
4) 5) 6)

7) 8) 9)

Course 3 · Chapter 5 Triangles and The Pythagorean Theorem 1


8 – Ch. 5 – Exam Prep
Find the value of the interior angle.
10) 11) 12)

Lesson 5.4 Practice Polygons and Angles


Find the sum of the interior angle measures of each polygon.
13) Hexagon (6 sides) 14) Triskadecagon (13 sides) 15) Icositetragon (24 sides)

Find the measure of one interior angle of each polygon. Round to the nearest hundredth if necessary.
16) Heptagon (7 sides) 17) Icosagon (20 sides) 18) Dodecagon (12 sides)

Find the measure of one exterior angle of each regular polygon. Round to the nearest hundredth if
necessary.
19) Triacontadigon (32 sides) 20) Nonagon (9 sides) 21) Pentadecagon (15 sides)

Course 3 · Chapter 5 Triangles and The Pythagorean Theorem 2


8 – Ch. 5 – Exam Prep
Lesson 5.5 Practice The Pythagorean Theorem
Write an equation you could use to find the length of the missing side of each right triangle. Then find the
missing side length. Round to the nearest hundredth if necessary.
22) 𝑏 = 10 yd, 𝑐 = 75 yd 23) 24) 𝑏 = 44 cm, 𝑐 = 70 cm

25) 𝑎 = 12 cm, 𝑐 = 25 cm 26) 27) 𝑎 = 24 in, 𝑏 = 143 in

Identify if the numbers form a right triangle. Justify your answer.


28) 8 yd, 10 yd, 6 yd 29) 15 cm, 13 cm, 13 cm 30) 48 ft, 55 ft, 73 ft

Course 3 · Chapter 5 Triangles and The Pythagorean Theorem 3


8 – Ch. 5 – Exam Prep
Lesson 5.6 Practice Use the Pythagorean Theorem
Write an equation that can be used to answer the question. Then solve. Round to the nearest hundredth if
necessary.
31) 32) 33)

Lesson 5.7 Practice Distance on the Coordinate Plane


Find the distance between each pair of points. Round to the nearest hundredth if necessary.
34) 35) 36)

37) (4, 5) and (0, 2) 38) (−1, 1) and (−4, 4) 39) (0, −4) and (−3, 0)

Course 3 · Chapter 5 Triangles and The Pythagorean Theorem 4

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