Stage 13 · First Steps in Geometry

13.5  Meeting and Measuring Angles

An angle is the opening between two rays — and a protractor tells you how wide.

Ages 11–14 · Intuition before notation
Knowledge point page

Point 1 of 4 in this lesson: 13.5.1 What an angle is, and how to name it

13.5.1 What an angle is, and how to name it

Take a single point and shoot two rays out of it. The shared starting point is the vertex; the two rays are the sides of the angle. The angle itself is the opening between the sides — the amount of turn you'd make to swing one side onto the other.

The angle ∠AOB: vertex O, sides ray OA and ray OB, and the shaded opening between them.

There are three common ways to name this angle, and the symbol for "angle" is :

Key idea

In a three-letter angle name, the vertex letter goes in the middle. ∠AOB and ∠BOA are the same angle (vertex O); ∠OAB is a different angle (vertex A).

Watch out

You may not shorten an angle to ∠O if several angles share the vertex O. If both ∠AOB and ∠BOC live at O, then "∠O" is ambiguous — nobody can tell which opening you mean. Use the full three letters.

eastmath.com · 13.5 Meeting and Measuring Angles · 13.5.1 What an angle is, and how to name it