Chain isosceles base angles to find unknown angles
4.MD.C.7
Generated variants — 10
In the figure, sides , , and have equal length, and the angle at point (angle ) measures . Find the measure of angle .
Show solution
Understand
Vertex A is at the top with B, C, D along the base. Sides AB, AC, and CD are all equal, and angle ADC is 15 degrees. I must find angle BAC.
- AB = AC = CD (three equal segments)
- B, C, D lie on the base in that order, so B, C, D are collinear
- Angle ADC = 15 degrees
- The measure of angle BAC
- An isosceles triangle has two equal base angles
- Angles in a triangle sum to 180 degrees
- Angles on a straight line sum to 180 degrees
Plan
#7 Identify Subproblems · also uses: #1 Draw a Diagram#11 Work Backwards
The figure splits into two isosceles triangles (ACD and ABC). I solve the one I can (ACD, where the known angle lives) first, carry the result across the straight base, then finish in triangle ABC.
Execute
Review
Angle BAC = 120 degrees, and each triangle's angles total 180 degrees (15+15+150 and 30+30+120), confirming the chain is consistent.
Draw the figure to scale (tool 1) and measure angle BAC with a protractor to confirm the 120-degree answer found by stepwise angle chasing.
Standards · min grade 4
4.MD.C.7Recognize angle measure as additive and solve addition and subtraction problems — Chaining isosceles base angles, the triangle-sum, and the straight-line angle across two triangles to find angle BAC.
In the figure, sides , , and have equal length, and the angle at point (angle ) measures . Find the measure of angle .
Show solution
Understand
Vertex A is at the top with B, C, D along the base. Sides AB, AC, and CD are all equal, and angle ADC is 32 degrees. I must find angle BAC.
- AB = AC = CD (three equal segments)
- B, C, D lie on the base in that order, so B, C, D are collinear
- Angle ADC = 32 degrees
- The measure of angle BAC
- An isosceles triangle has two equal base angles
- Angles in a triangle sum to 180 degrees
- Angles on a straight line sum to 180 degrees
Plan
#7 Identify Subproblems · also uses: #1 Draw a Diagram#11 Work Backwards
The figure splits into two isosceles triangles (ACD and ABC). I solve the one I can (ACD, where the known angle lives) first, carry the result across the straight base, then finish in triangle ABC.
Execute
Review
Angle BAC = 52 degrees, and each triangle's angles total 180 degrees (32+32+116 and 64+64+52), confirming the chain is consistent.
Draw the figure to scale (tool 1) and measure angle BAC with a protractor to confirm the 52-degree answer found by stepwise angle chasing.
Standards · min grade 4
4.MD.C.7Recognize angle measure as additive and solve addition and subtraction problems — Chaining isosceles base angles, the triangle-sum, and the straight-line angle across two triangles to find angle BAC.
In the figure, sides , , and have equal length, and the angle at point (angle ) measures . Find the measure of angle .
Show solution
Understand
Vertex A is at the top with B, C, D along the base. Sides AB, AC, and CD are all equal, and angle ADC is 28 degrees. I must find angle BAC.
- AB = AC = CD (three equal segments)
- B, C, D lie on the base in that order, so B, C, D are collinear
- Angle ADC = 28 degrees
- The measure of angle BAC
- An isosceles triangle has two equal base angles
- Angles in a triangle sum to 180 degrees
- Angles on a straight line sum to 180 degrees
Plan
#7 Identify Subproblems · also uses: #1 Draw a Diagram#11 Work Backwards
The figure splits into two isosceles triangles (ACD and ABC). I solve the one I can (ACD, where the known angle lives) first, carry the result across the straight base, then finish in triangle ABC.
Execute
Review
Angle BAC = 68 degrees, and each triangle's angles total 180 degrees (28+28+124 and 56+56+68), confirming the chain is consistent.
Draw the figure to scale (tool 1) and measure angle BAC with a protractor to confirm the 68-degree answer found by stepwise angle chasing.
Standards · min grade 4
4.MD.C.7Recognize angle measure as additive and solve addition and subtraction problems — Chaining isosceles base angles, the triangle-sum, and the straight-line angle across two triangles to find angle BAC.
In the figure, sides , , and have equal length, and the angle at point (angle ) measures . Find the measure of angle .
Show solution
Understand
Vertex A is at the top with B, C, D along the base. Sides AB, AC, and CD are all equal, and angle ADC is 30 degrees. I must find angle BAC.
- AB = AC = CD (three equal segments)
- B, C, D lie on the base in that order, so B, C, D are collinear
- Angle ADC = 30 degrees
- The measure of angle BAC
- An isosceles triangle has two equal base angles
- Angles in a triangle sum to 180 degrees
- Angles on a straight line sum to 180 degrees
Plan
#7 Identify Subproblems · also uses: #1 Draw a Diagram#11 Work Backwards
The figure splits into two isosceles triangles (ACD and ABC). I solve the one I can (ACD, where the known angle lives) first, carry the result across the straight base, then finish in triangle ABC.
Execute
Review
Angle BAC = 60 degrees, and each triangle's angles total 180 degrees (30+30+120 and 60+60+60), confirming the chain is consistent.
Draw the figure to scale (tool 1) and measure angle BAC with a protractor to confirm the 60-degree answer found by stepwise angle chasing.
Standards · min grade 4
4.MD.C.7Recognize angle measure as additive and solve addition and subtraction problems — Chaining isosceles base angles, the triangle-sum, and the straight-line angle across two triangles to find angle BAC.
In the figure, sides , , and have equal length, and the angle at point (angle ) measures . Find the measure of angle .
Show solution
Understand
Vertex A is at the top with B, C, D along the base. Sides AB, AC, and CD are all equal, and angle ADC is 22 degrees. I must find angle BAC.
- AB = AC = CD (three equal segments)
- B, C, D lie on the base in that order, so B, C, D are collinear
- Angle ADC = 22 degrees
- The measure of angle BAC
- An isosceles triangle has two equal base angles
- Angles in a triangle sum to 180 degrees
- Angles on a straight line sum to 180 degrees
Plan
#7 Identify Subproblems · also uses: #1 Draw a Diagram#11 Work Backwards
The figure splits into two isosceles triangles (ACD and ABC). I solve the one I can (ACD, where the known angle lives) first, carry the result across the straight base, then finish in triangle ABC.
Execute
Review
Angle BAC = 92 degrees, and each triangle's angles total 180 degrees (22+22+136 and 44+44+92), confirming the chain is consistent.
Draw the figure to scale (tool 1) and measure angle BAC with a protractor to confirm the 92-degree answer found by stepwise angle chasing.
Standards · min grade 4
4.MD.C.7Recognize angle measure as additive and solve addition and subtraction problems — Chaining isosceles base angles, the triangle-sum, and the straight-line angle across two triangles to find angle BAC.
In the figure, sides , , and have equal length, and the angle at point (angle ) measures . Find the measure of angle .
Show solution
Understand
Vertex A is at the top with B, C, D along the base. Sides AB, AC, and CD are all equal, and angle ADC is 35 degrees. I must find angle BAC.
- AB = AC = CD (three equal segments)
- B, C, D lie on the base in that order, so B, C, D are collinear
- Angle ADC = 35 degrees
- The measure of angle BAC
- An isosceles triangle has two equal base angles
- Angles in a triangle sum to 180 degrees
- Angles on a straight line sum to 180 degrees
Plan
#7 Identify Subproblems · also uses: #1 Draw a Diagram#11 Work Backwards
The figure splits into two isosceles triangles (ACD and ABC). I solve the one I can (ACD, where the known angle lives) first, carry the result across the straight base, then finish in triangle ABC.
Execute
Review
Angle BAC = 40 degrees, and each triangle's angles total 180 degrees (35+35+110 and 70+70+40), confirming the chain is consistent.
Draw the figure to scale (tool 1) and measure angle BAC with a protractor to confirm the 40-degree answer found by stepwise angle chasing.
Standards · min grade 4
4.MD.C.7Recognize angle measure as additive and solve addition and subtraction problems — Chaining isosceles base angles, the triangle-sum, and the straight-line angle across two triangles to find angle BAC.
In the figure, sides , , and have equal length, and the angle at point (angle ) measures . Find the measure of angle .
Show solution
Understand
Vertex A is at the top with B, C, D along the base. Sides AB, AC, and CD are all equal, and angle ADC is 38 degrees. I must find angle BAC.
- AB = AC = CD (three equal segments)
- B, C, D lie on the base in that order, so B, C, D are collinear
- Angle ADC = 38 degrees
- The measure of angle BAC
- An isosceles triangle has two equal base angles
- Angles in a triangle sum to 180 degrees
- Angles on a straight line sum to 180 degrees
Plan
#7 Identify Subproblems · also uses: #1 Draw a Diagram#11 Work Backwards
The figure splits into two isosceles triangles (ACD and ABC). I solve the one I can (ACD, where the known angle lives) first, carry the result across the straight base, then finish in triangle ABC.
Execute
Review
Angle BAC = 28 degrees, and each triangle's angles total 180 degrees (38+38+104 and 76+76+28), confirming the chain is consistent.
Draw the figure to scale (tool 1) and measure angle BAC with a protractor to confirm the 28-degree answer found by stepwise angle chasing.
Standards · min grade 4
4.MD.C.7Recognize angle measure as additive and solve addition and subtraction problems — Chaining isosceles base angles, the triangle-sum, and the straight-line angle across two triangles to find angle BAC.
In the figure, sides , , and have equal length, and the angle at point (angle ) measures . Find the measure of angle .
Show solution
Understand
Vertex A is at the top with B, C, D along the base. Sides AB, AC, and CD are all equal, and angle ADC is 25 degrees. I must find angle BAC.
- AB = AC = CD (three equal segments)
- B, C, D lie on the base in that order, so B, C, D are collinear
- Angle ADC = 25 degrees
- The measure of angle BAC
- An isosceles triangle has two equal base angles
- Angles in a triangle sum to 180 degrees
- Angles on a straight line sum to 180 degrees
Plan
#7 Identify Subproblems · also uses: #1 Draw a Diagram#11 Work Backwards
The figure splits into two isosceles triangles (ACD and ABC). I solve the one I can (ACD, where the known angle lives) first, carry the result across the straight base, then finish in triangle ABC.
Execute
Review
Angle BAC = 80 degrees, and each triangle's angles total 180 degrees (25+25+130 and 50+50+80), confirming the chain is consistent.
Draw the figure to scale (tool 1) and measure angle BAC with a protractor to confirm the 80-degree answer found by stepwise angle chasing.
Standards · min grade 4
4.MD.C.7Recognize angle measure as additive and solve addition and subtraction problems — Chaining isosceles base angles, the triangle-sum, and the straight-line angle across two triangles to find angle BAC.
In the figure, sides , , and have equal length, and the angle at point (angle ) measures . Find the measure of angle .
Show solution
Understand
Vertex A is at the top with B, C, D along the base. Sides AB, AC, and CD are all equal, and angle ADC is 20 degrees. I must find angle BAC.
- AB = AC = CD (three equal segments)
- B, C, D lie on the base in that order, so B, C, D are collinear
- Angle ADC = 20 degrees
- The measure of angle BAC
- An isosceles triangle has two equal base angles
- Angles in a triangle sum to 180 degrees
- Angles on a straight line sum to 180 degrees
Plan
#7 Identify Subproblems · also uses: #1 Draw a Diagram#11 Work Backwards
The figure splits into two isosceles triangles (ACD and ABC). I solve the one I can (ACD, where the known angle lives) first, carry the result across the straight base, then finish in triangle ABC.
Execute
Review
Angle BAC = 100 degrees, and each triangle's angles total 180 degrees (20+20+140 and 40+40+100), confirming the chain is consistent.
Draw the figure to scale (tool 1) and measure angle BAC with a protractor to confirm the 100-degree answer found by stepwise angle chasing.
Standards · min grade 4
4.MD.C.7Recognize angle measure as additive and solve addition and subtraction problems — Chaining isosceles base angles, the triangle-sum, and the straight-line angle across two triangles to find angle BAC.
In the figure, sides , , and have equal length, and the angle at point (angle ) measures . Find the measure of angle .
Show solution
Understand
Vertex A is at the top with B, C, D along the base. Sides AB, AC, and CD are all equal, and angle ADC is 40 degrees. I must find angle BAC.
- AB = AC = CD (three equal segments)
- B, C, D lie on the base in that order, so B, C, D are collinear
- Angle ADC = 40 degrees
- The measure of angle BAC
- An isosceles triangle has two equal base angles
- Angles in a triangle sum to 180 degrees
- Angles on a straight line sum to 180 degrees
Plan
#7 Identify Subproblems · also uses: #1 Draw a Diagram#11 Work Backwards
The figure splits into two isosceles triangles (ACD and ABC). I solve the one I can (ACD, where the known angle lives) first, carry the result across the straight base, then finish in triangle ABC.
Execute
Review
Angle BAC = 20 degrees, and each triangle's angles total 180 degrees (40+40+100 and 80+80+20), confirming the chain is consistent.
Draw the figure to scale (tool 1) and measure angle BAC with a protractor to confirm the 20-degree answer found by stepwise angle chasing.
Standards · min grade 4
4.MD.C.7Recognize angle measure as additive and solve addition and subtraction problems — Chaining isosceles base angles, the triangle-sum, and the straight-line angle across two triangles to find angle BAC.