Stage 14 · Intersecting Lines, Parallel Lines & Translation

14.3  Angles Cut by a Third Line

One line across two makes eight angles — and three pairs worth naming: F, Z, and U.

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

Point 5 of 5 in this lesson: 14.3.5 Telling the three apart

14.3.5 Telling the three apart

You never have to memorize the picture. Run the two-question test from 14.3.1 on the pair in front of you:

Question 1 — interior or exterior? Is each angle between the lines, or outside?
Question 2 — same side or opposite side of the transversal?

Those two answers pin the name down exactly:

PairLetterInterior / exteriorSide of transversal
CorrespondingFone interior, one exteriorsame side
Alternate interiorZboth interioropposite sides
Co-interiorUboth interiorsame side

So the two interior pairs differ only in the second answer: alternate interior = opposite sides, co-interior = same side. And corresponding is the only one of the three that pairs an interior angle with an exterior one.

Try it Name that pair

A pair of angles is marked in amber. Decide what they are, then tap your answer. Cycle through the figures with the arrows.

Figure 1
Watch out

These are names for position, not size. It is tempting to say "corresponding angles are equal" — but on the non-parallel lines above they are clearly unequal. Equal angles only appear once the two lines are parallel, which is exactly what 14.4 and 14.5 are about.

eastmath.com · 14.3 Angles Cut by a Third Line · 14.3.5 Telling the three apart