Stage 14 · Intersecting Lines, Parallel Lines & Translation

14.5  Properties of Parallel Lines

Run the door the other way: parallel lines hand you equal F-angles, equal Z-angles, and U-angles to 180°.

Ages 11–14 · Reasoning, one step at a time
Knowledge point page

Point 3 of 6 in this lesson: 14.5.3 Property 3 — parallel ⇒ supplementary co-interior angles

14.5.3 Property 3 — parallel ⇒ supplementary co-interior angles

The third pairing behaves differently — and it is the one students forget. The co-interior pair (the U: both inside, same side of the transversal) does not come out equal. Instead the two angles add to 180° — they are supplementary.

The co-interior pair traces a U: both inside, on the same side. With a ∥ b, they are supplementary — here 62° + 118° = 180°.

Why 180° and not equal? One co-interior angle is the θ angle; the other is a 180 − θ angle (its neighbour along the straight line). Add them: θ + (180 − θ) = 180°. The straight line does the work.

Angle pairTest (14.4): angles ⇒ parallelProperty (14.5): parallel ⇒ angles
Corresponding (F)equal ⇒ ∥ ⇒ equal
Alternate interior (Z)equal ⇒ ∥ ⇒ equal
Co-interior (U)sum 180° ⇒ ∥ ⇒ sum 180°
Watch out

Corresponding and alternate-interior angles are equal; co-interior angles are supplementary (sum 180°), not equal. Setting a co-interior pair equal is the single most common slip in this whole stage.

eastmath.com · 14.5 Properties of Parallel Lines · 14.5.3 Property 3 — parallel ⇒ supplementary co-interior angles