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Properties of Parallelograms

Properties of Parallelograms

A parallelogram is a special type of quadrilateral where both pairs of opposite sides are parallel. Understanding the unique properties of parallelograms is essential for solving geometry problems and proving relationships between shapes.

Key Properties of a Parallelogram

If a quadrilateral is a parallelogram, it automatically has the following properties:

  1. Opposite sides are parallel: ABCDAB \parallel CD and ADBCAD \parallel BC.
  2. Opposite sides are equal: AB=CDAB = CD and AD=BCAD = BC.
  3. Opposite angles are equal: A=C\angle A = \angle C and B=D\angle B = \angle D.
  4. Consecutive angles are supplementary: They add up to 180180^\circ. For example, A+B=180\angle A + \angle B = 180^\circ.
  5. Diagonals bisect each other: The point where the two diagonals intersect divides each diagonal into two equal parts.

Proving a Quadrilateral is a Parallelogram

To prove that a quadrilateral is a parallelogram, you only need to show that one of the following conditions is true:

  • Both pairs of opposite sides are parallel.
  • Both pairs of opposite sides are equal.
  • Both pairs of opposite angles are equal.
  • One pair of opposite sides is both parallel and equal.
  • The diagonals bisect each other.

Example Problems

Example 1: Finding Angles In parallelogram ABCDABCD, A=3x+10\angle A = 3x + 10 and B=5x30\angle B = 5x - 30. Find the measure of all four angles.

Solution: Since A\angle A and B\angle B are consecutive angles in a parallelogram, they are supplementary: (3x+10)+(5x30)=180(3x + 10) + (5x - 30) = 180 8x20=1808x - 20 = 180 8x=200    x=258x = 200 \implies x = 25

Now, substitute xx back into the expressions:

  • A=3(25)+10=85\angle A = 3(25) + 10 = 85^\circ
  • B=5(25)30=95\angle B = 5(25) - 30 = 95^\circ

Because opposite angles are equal, C=A=85\angle C = \angle A = 85^\circ and D=B=95\angle D = \angle B = 95^\circ.

Example 2: Proving a Parallelogram Prove that quadrilateral ABCDABCD is a parallelogram given that AB=CDAB = CD and ABCDAB \parallel CD.

Solution:

  1. Draw diagonal ACAC, creating two triangles: ABC\triangle ABC and CDA\triangle CDA.
  2. Because ABCDAB \parallel CD, the alternate interior angles are equal: BAC=DCA\angle BAC = \angle DCA.
  3. Both triangles share side ACAC, so AC=CAAC = CA (Reflexive Property).
  4. We are given that AB=CDAB = CD.
  5. By Side-Angle-Side (SAS) congruence, ABCCDA\triangle ABC \cong \triangle CDA.
  6. Because the triangles are congruent, the corresponding parts are equal: BCA=DAC\angle BCA = \angle DAC.
  7. These are alternate interior angles for lines ADAD and BCBC, which means ADBCAD \parallel BC.
  8. Since both pairs of opposite sides (ABCDAB \parallel CD and ADBCAD \parallel BC) are parallel, ABCDABCD is a parallelogram by definition. (Note: You can also state the theorem directly: If one pair of opposite sides is both parallel and equal, the quadrilateral is a parallelogram.)