Geometry and Shapes
1. Point, Line, Ray, and Line Segment
Basic Geometric Terms
| Term | Definition | Symbol | Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| Point | An exact location in space — has NO size | P | . P |
| Line | A straight path extending FOREVER in both directions | AB | ←——→ |
| Ray | A part of a line with ONE endpoint, extending forever in ONE direction | AB→ | ——→ |
| Line Segment | A part of a line with TWO endpoints | AB | —— |
'A point is a LOCATION, not a thing. It has no length, width, or height. We mark it with a dot for convenience.'
Key Properties
- A line has NO endpoints (infinite in both directions).
- A ray has ONE endpoint.
- A line segment has TWO endpoints — it can be measured.
- You can name a line by ANY two points on it: line AB, line BC, or line AC.
'Two points determine a UNIQUE line. Through a single point, infinitely many lines can pass.'
2. Angles — Types and Measurement
An ANGLE is formed when TWO rays meet at a common endpoint (the VERTEX).
Parts of an Angle
- Vertex: The common endpoint.
- Arms: The two rays forming the angle.
- Measure: How much one arm has rotated from the other — measured in DEGREES (°).
Types of Angles
| Type | Measure | Diagram Description | Examples in Real Life |
|---|---|---|---|
| Acute | Between 0° and 90° | Narrow opening | Hands showing 2 o'clock, slice of pizza |
| Right | Exactly 90° | L-shape | Corner of a book, wall meeting floor |
| Obtuse | Between 90° and 180° | Wide opening | Hands showing 4 o'clock, a reclining chair |
| Straight | Exactly 180° | Straight line | A ruler, horizon |
| Reflex | Between 180° and 360° | Very wide | Outside of a book corner |
'Look for the SQUARE symbol at the vertex — that tells you it is a RIGHT angle (90°). No other angle has this special symbol.'
Comparing Angles
'I can compare angles by looking at how much one ray has turned. The GREATER the turn, the LARGER the angle.'
- Acute < Right < Obtuse < Straight < Reflex
3. Circle — Radius, Diameter, Chord, Circumference
Parts of a Circle
| Part | Definition | Symbol/Formula |
|---|---|---|
| Centre | The fixed point inside the circle | O |
| Radius | Distance from centre to any point on the circle | r |
| Diameter | A line through the centre joining two points on the circle | d = 2 × r |
| Chord | A line joining any two points on the circle (does NOT have to pass through centre) | — |
| Circumference | The DISTANCE around the circle | C = 2πr (π ≈ 3.14) |
'The diameter is the LONGEST chord in a circle. Every diameter passes through the centre.'
Radius and Diameter Relationship
'If you know the radius, double it to get the diameter. If you know the diameter, halve it to get the radius.'
| Radius | Diameter |
|---|---|
| 3 cm | 6 cm |
| 7.5 cm | 15 cm |
| 12 cm | 24 cm |
| 0.5 cm | 1 cm |
Drawing a Circle
To draw a circle of radius 4 cm using a compass:
- Mark the centre point O.
- Set the compass to 4 cm using a ruler.
- Place the pointed end at O.
- Rotate the pencil end COMPLETELY around.
'The compass opening must NOT change while drawing. Hold the compass by the TOP, not the legs.'
4. Triangles — Types
Classification by Sides
| Type | Sides | Properties |
|---|---|---|
| Equilateral | All 3 sides EQUAL | All 3 angles are 60° each. Sum = 180°. |
| Isosceles | 2 sides EQUAL | Base angles (angles opposite equal sides) are EQUAL. |
| Scalene | ALL sides different | All angles are DIFFERENT. |
Classification by Angles
| Type | Angles | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Acute-angled | ALL 3 angles are ACUTE (< 90°) | 50°, 60°, 70° |
| Right-angled | ONE angle is exactly 90° | 90°, 45°, 45° |
| Obtuse-angled | ONE angle is OBTUSE (> 90°) | 110°, 35°, 35° |
'Every triangle has AT LEAST two acute angles. The sum of ALL three angles in ANY triangle is ALWAYS 180°.'
Triangle Facts
- A triangle has 3 sides, 3 angles, and 3 vertices.
- Sum of angles = 180°.
- The largest side is OPPOSITE the largest angle.
- 'No triangle can have more than one right angle or more than one obtuse angle.'
5. Quadrilaterals — Types
A QUADRILATERAL is a closed shape with FOUR sides and FOUR angles. Sum of interior angles = 360°.
| Type | Properties | Diagram |
|---|---|---|
| Square | All 4 sides EQUAL. All 4 angles 90°. | □ |
| Rectangle | Opposite sides EQUAL and PARALLEL. All angles 90°. | ▭ |
| Rhombus | All sides EQUAL. Opposite angles EQUAL. Diagonals perpendicular. | ◇ |
| Parallelogram | Opposite sides EQUAL and PARALLEL. Opposite angles EQUAL. | ▱ |
| Trapezium | ONE pair of parallel sides. | ⏢ |
'Squares are a SPECIAL type of rectangle AND a special type of rhombus. A rectangle is a special type of parallelogram.'
Comparing Quadrilaterals
| Property | Square | Rectangle | Rhombus | Parallelogram | Trapezium |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| All sides equal | ✓ | ✗ | ✓ | ✗ | ✗ |
| All angles 90° | ✓ | ✓ | ✗ | ✗ | ✗ |
| Opposite sides parallel | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | 1 pair |
| Opposite sides equal | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✗ |
Key Facts to Remember
- The sum of angles in a triangle is ALWAYS 180°.
- The sum of angles in a quadrilateral is ALWAYS 360°.
- A circle has INFINITE radii, all of the SAME length.
- A right angle is exactly 90°. An acute angle is less than 90°. An obtuse angle is between 90° and 180°.
- 'Geometry is about SHAPES and their PROPERTIES. Every shape has a definition that tells you exactly what it is.'
Common Mistakes
| Mistake | Why It Is Wrong | Correct Approach |
|---|---|---|
| Confusing radius and diameter | The radius is HALF the diameter | If d = 8 cm, r = 4 cm |
| Calling any 4-sided shape a square | A square must have ALL sides EQUAL and ALL angles 90° | A kite or rhombus is also 4-sided but not a square |
| Thinking a line has endpoints | A line extends FOREVER | What has endpoints is a LINE SEGMENT |
| Saying a triangle can have two right angles | Sum would exceed 180° | Two right angles = 180°, leaving 0° for the third angle — impossible |
Exam Focus (ICSE Class 5)
| Topic | Marks (Typical) | Question Type |
|---|---|---|
| Identifying angles | 2-3 marks | Name the type of angle shown |
| Circle — radius and diameter | 3 marks | Find diameter given radius and vice versa |
| Triangles — types and properties | 3-4 marks | Classify triangles; find missing angle |
| Quadrilaterals | 2-3 marks | Match properties to shape names |
| Drawing with compass | 3-4 marks | Construct a circle of given radius |
Self-Test: 5 Questions
Q1. Classify the following triangles: (a) Sides: 5 cm, 5 cm, 5 cm (b) Angles: 90°, 45°, 45° (c) Sides: 7 cm, 8 cm, 12 cm
Q2. A circle has a radius of 6 cm. What is its diameter?
Q3. Find the missing angle: A triangle has angles 65° and 45°. What is the third angle?
Q4. Name the quadrilateral that has all sides equal but angles are NOT 90°.
Q5. Draw a line segment AB of length 5 cm. Then draw a circle with centre A and radius 3 cm.
Answers
A1. (a) Equilateral triangle (all sides equal). (b) Right-angled triangle (has a 90° angle). (c) Scalene triangle (all sides different).
A2. Diameter = 2 × radius = 2 × 6 = 12 cm.
A3. Sum of angles = 180°. 65° + 45° = 110°. Third angle = 180° − 110° = 70°.
A4. Rhombus.
A5. Use a ruler to draw AB = 5 cm. Place compass point at A, set to 3 cm using ruler. Rotate compass fully to draw the circle.
