Geometry: English Vocabulary List

Explore 53 English words about geometry with pronunciation, definitions and example sentences.

53 words Act Math English Vocabulary
tetrahedral /tˌɛtɹɐhˈiːdɹəl/ adjective

characterized by or resembling a tetrahedron, which has four triangular faces

"The molecule is tetrahedral."

"The tetrahedral shape of the molecule was discovered using X ray crystallography and the chemists published their findings in a scientific journal."

isosceles /aɪˈsɔsəˌɫiz/ adjective

describing a triangle with at least two sides of equal length

"The triangle is isosceles."

"The triangle is isosceles and has two sides of equal length and one shorter side."

radian /ɹˈeɪdiən/ noun

a unit for measuring angles, defined by the angle made when the radius of a circle is laid along its edge

"Measure in radian."

"We measure angles in radian when working with trigonometric functions and circles."

diameter /daɪˈæmətɝ/ noun

a straight line from one side of a round object, particularly a circle, passing through the center and joining the other side

"The diameter of the circle is ten centimeters."

"The diameter of the tree trunk was so large that two people could not wrap their arms around it."

perimeter /pɝˈɪmətɝ/ noun

the total length of the external boundary of something

"The guards walked along the perimeter of the army base."

"A perimeter is the continuous boundary line enclosing a defined area"

right angle /ˈraɪt ˈæŋɡəl/ noun

an angle measuring exactly 90 degrees

"The corner made a right angle."

"The corner of a square book forms a right angle that measures exactly ninety degrees."

vertical angle /vˈɜːɾɪkəl ˈæŋɡəl/ noun

one of a pair of opposite angles made by two intersecting lines, which are always equal

"Vertical angle equal."

"Vertical angles are always equal when two lines intersect each other."

interior angle /ɪntˈiəɹɪɚɹ ˈæŋɡəl/ noun

an angle formed between two sides of a polygon that lies inside the shape

"Interior angle sum."

"The sum of interior angles in any triangle is always one hundred eighty degrees."

acute angle /ɐkjˈuːt ˈæŋɡəl/ noun

an angle that measures between 0 and 90 degrees, which is less than a right angle (90 degrees)

"The angle was acute."

"An acute angle measures less than ninety degrees, which makes it smaller than a right angle."

consecutive angle /kənsˈɛkjuːtˌɪv ˈæŋɡəl/ noun

pairs of angles that share a common side and vertex in a polygon or between intersecting lines

"The consecutive angles of a parallelogram are supplementary."

"Consecutive angles between parallel lines and a transversal have special properties."

protractor /pɹətɹˈæktɚ/ noun

a measuring instrument used to measure and draw angles

"Use a protractor to measure the angle."

"Students use a protractor to measure the size of angles accurately in geometry class."

polygon /ˈpɑɫɪˌɡɑn/ noun

(geometry) a flat shape consisting of three or more straight sides

"A polygon has sides."

"A polygon is a closed two-dimensional shape formed by straight line segments, such as a triangle or a square."

parallelogram /pˌæɹəlˈɛləɡɹˌæm/ noun

(geometry) any flat shape with four straight sides, the opposite sides of which are equal and parallel to each other

"A parallelogram is a four-sided shape with opposite sides that are parallel."

"A rectangle is a special type of parallelogram where all four angles are right angles."

trapezoid /tɹˈæpɪzˌɔɪd/ noun

(geometry) a flat shape with four flat sides, two of which are parallel

"The trapezoid has one pair of parallel sides."

"A trapezoid is a quadrilateral with at least one set of parallel sides"

pentagon /ˈpɛnɪˌɡɑn/ noun

a geometric shape with five angles and five straight sides

"A pentagon has five."

"The United States Department of Defense headquarters is famously known as the Pentagon due to its five-sided geometric shape."

rhombus /ɹˈɑːmbəs/ noun

(geometry) a flat shape with four equal sides in which opposite angles are equal

"A rhombus has four equal sides."

"A rhombus looks like a slanted square and has four equal sides with equal opposite angles."

epicycle /ˈɛpɪsˌaɪkəl/ noun

a small circle whose center moves around the circumference of a larger circle

"The old model of the planets used epicycles."

"Ancient astronomers used the epicycle model to explain the motion of planets in the sky."

hyperbola /haɪˈpɝbəɫə/ noun

a geometric curve formed by the intersection of a plane with two cones, resulting in two symmetrical branches

"The hyperbola has two separate curves."

"A hyperbola is a conic section formed by slicing a double cone at a steep angle"

parabola /pɝˈæbəɫə/ noun

(geometry) a symmetrical open curve that is similar to the path of an object thrown into the air passes till it falls back to earth

"The parabola is a curve."

"The ball flew in a perfect parabola before landing exactly where the player had aimed it."

ellipse /ɪˈɫɪps/ noun

(geometry) a closed plane curve that has two focal points

"An ellipse is oval."

"The orbit of a planet around the sun is not a perfect circle but rather an ellipse with the sun at one focus."

right triangle /ɹˈaɪt tɹˈaɪæŋɡəl/ noun

a flat geometric shape consisting of three straight sides and one right angle

"Right triangle has."

"A right triangle has one angle that measures exactly ninety degrees."

acute triangle /ɐkjˈuːt tɹˈaɪæŋɡəl/ noun

a triangle in which all three interior angles are less than 90 degrees

"An acute triangle has three small angles."

"All three angles in an acute triangle are less than ninety degrees."

equilateral triangle /ˌiːkwᵻlˈæɾɚɹəl tɹˈaɪæŋɡəl/ noun

a type of triangle with all three sides of equal length

"Draw equilateral triangle."

"We learned how to draw an equilateral triangle with three equal sides and angles."

scalene triangle /skˈeɪliːn tɹˈaɪæŋɡəl/ noun

a type of triangle that has all three sides of different lengths

"A scalene triangle has no equal sides."

"A scalene triangle has three sides of different lengths and three different angles."

hypotenuse /haɪpˈɑːtənˌuːs/ noun

the longest side of a right-angled triangle, opposite the right angle, and defined as the side opposite the right angle in a right-angled triangle

"The hypotenuse is the longest."

"To find the hypotenuse, you must apply the Pythagorean theorem to any right-angled triangle."

right circular cylinder /ɹˈaɪt sˈɜːkjʊlɚ sˈɪlɪndɚ/ noun

a three-dimensional geometric shape with two parallel circular bases connected by a curved surface at a right angle to the bases

"A soda can is a right circular cylinder."

"A right circular cylinder has two circular bases that are parallel and aligned directly above each other."

rectangular pyramid /ɹɛktˈænɡjʊlɚ pˈɪɹɐmˌɪd/ noun

a three-dimensional geometric shape that has a rectangular base and four triangular faces that meet at a single point called the apex

"A rectangular pyramid has a rectangle for a base."

"A rectangular pyramid has a rectangular base and four triangular faces meeting at a point."

asymmetry /ˌeɪˈsɪmətɹi/ noun

(geometry) a lack of symmetry or equivalence in shape or size between the two sides or parts of something

"The design's asymmetry made it interesting."

"The architect deliberately introduced asymmetry into the building's design for a unique aesthetic."

vertex /ˈvɝˌtɛks/ noun

a point where two or more lines, edges, or rays meet to form an angle, or the point at which the sides of a polygon intersect

"The vertex is here."

"The vertex of the pyramid is the single point at the apex where all the triangular faces meet."

line of symmetry /lˈaɪn ʌv sˈɪmətɹi/ noun

a line that divides a shape into two congruent parts

"Find line of symmetry."

"We find the line of symmetry that divides the shape into two identical halves."

geometric series /dʒˌiːoʊmˈɛtɹɪk sˈɪɹiz/ noun

a series of numbers in which each term after the first is found by multiplying the previous term by a fixed, non-zero number

"Study geometric series."

"We study geometric series to understand patterns where each term is multiplied by a constant ratio."

surface area /sˈɜːfɪs ˈɛɹiə/ noun

the total area that the surface of a three-dimensional object occupies

"Calculate surface area."

"We calculate the surface area of the cube to find how much paint we need."

transversal /tɹænzˈvɝsəl/ adjective

(of a line) intersecting two or more other lines at different points

"Draw a transversal line."

"The transversal line crosses two parallel lines and creates eight angles with special relationships."

quadrant /ˈkwɑdɹənt/ noun

one-fourth of a circle, formed by two perpendicular radii and the connecting arc

"The graph is divided into four quadrants."

"The point lies in the first quadrant of the coordinate plane where both x and y are positive."

asymptote /ˈæsəmˌtoʊt/ noun

a straight line that a curve approaches indefinitely but never intersects, characterizing the limiting behavior of the curve

"The asymptote is a line the graph approaches."

"An asymptote is a straight line that a curve approaches infinitely closely but never intersects"

bisect /baɪsˈɛkt/ verb

to divide something into two equal parts

"The line bisects the angle perfectly."

"The straight line will bisect the circle into two equal halves of exactly the same size and shape."

slope /sloʊp/ noun

the measure of how steep a line is, found by dividing the change in height by the change in horizontal distance

"The slope is steep."

"The gentle slope of the roof ensures efficient water runoff during heavy rainfall."

arc /ˈɑɹk/ noun

(geometry) a part of a circle, which is curved

"Draw a long arc."

"The architect designed a graceful arc for the bridge, spanning the river with elegant curvature."

radius /ˈɹeɪdiəs/ noun

the length of a straight line drawn from the center of a circle to any point on its outer boundary

"The radius measures five inches."

"The radius of the circular pool was measured from the center to the edge."

circumference /ˌsɝˈkəmfɹəns/ noun

(geometry) the length of the external boundary of a curved shape, especially a circle

"Circumference is a length."

"We calculated the circumference of the circular garden to determine how much fencing was needed."

area /ˈɛriə/ noun

the measurement of a piece of land or a flat surface

"This is a large area."

"The total area of the property, including the garden and patio, is approximately one acre."

volume /ˈvɑljum/ noun

the amount of space that a substance or object takes or the amount of space inside an object

"This bottle has a large volume."

"The total volume of the gas increased significantly when the temperature rose."

angle /ˈæŋɡəɫ/ noun

the space between two lines or surfaces that are joined, measured in degrees or radians

"This is a sharp angle."

"The carpenter carefully measured the angle to ensure the two pieces of wood fit together precisely."

obtuse /ɑbˈtus/ adjective

(of angle) greater than 90 degrees but less than 180 degrees

"The angle is obtuse."

"In geometry, an obtuse angle is always greater than a right angle but less than a straight angle."

perpendicular /ˌpɝpənˈdɪkjəɫɝ/ adjective

(of lines or planes) intersecting each other at a 90 degree angle

"The lines are perpendicular."

"The two lines are perpendicular because they intersect at a right angle of ninety degrees."

quadrilateral /kwˌɑːdɹɪlˈæɾɚɹəl/ noun

(geometry) a flat figure with four straight sides and four angles

"A quadrilateral has four sides."

"A quadrilateral is any polygon with four sides and four vertices including squares rectangles and trapezoids."

diagonal /daɪˈæɡənəɫ/ noun

a straight line connecting opposite corners of a flat shape at an angle

"The diagonal connects opposite corners."

"A diagonal is a line segment connecting two non adjacent vertices of a polygon or polyhedron."

congruent /ˈkɔnɡɹuˌɛnt/ adjective

(in geometry) describing shapes of the same size and form

"The triangles are congruent."

"The two triangles are congruent because they have the same shape and size."

base /beɪs/ noun

the side of a geometric shape, usually the one considered as the bottom, from which the height is measured

"The base is wide."

"The height of the triangle is measured perpendicularly from the base to the opposite vertex."

parallel /ˈpɛɹəˌɫɛɫ/ noun

a pair of geometric figures, such as lines or planes, that do not meet or intersect, no matter how far they are extended

"Parallel lines never meet."

"Parallel lines are lines in a plane that never meet no matter how far they are extended."

tangent /ˈtænʤənt/ noun

a straight line that touches a curve or surface at exactly one point, known as the point of tangency

"The tangent touched the circle."

"In calculus, a tangent line provides the instantaneous rate of change for a function at a specific point."

chord /kɔrd/ noun

a straight line segment that connects two points on the edge of a circle

"The chord is long."

"This particular chord connects two distinct points on the circumference of the circle, passing through its interior."

translate /trænzˈleɪt/ verb

(geometry) to move a shape or figure from one position to another without rotating, resizing, or otherwise altering its shape

"We can translate the square."

"To translate the triangle, we simply shift its position on the grid without altering its orientation."

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