Learn on PengiPengi Math (Grade 5)Chapter 11: Geometry — Classifying and Understanding Two-Dimensional Figures

Lesson 2: Defining and Identifying Quadrilaterals

In this Grade 5 Pengi Math lesson from Chapter 11, students learn to define a quadrilateral as a polygon with exactly four sides and four vertices, and discover that the sum of interior angles in any quadrilateral is always 360°. Students identify and classify common types of quadrilaterals using defining properties such as side count and angle measures, and distinguish quadrilaterals from other polygons.

Section 1

Defining a Quadrilateral

Property

A quadrilateral is a polygon with exactly four sides and four vertices.
The sum of all interior angles in any quadrilateral equals 360°360°:

A+B+C+D=360°\angle A + \angle B + \angle C + \angle D = 360°

Examples

Section 2

Types of Quadrilaterals

Property

  • A quadrilateral is a polygon with four sides.
  • A trapezoid is a quadrilateral with one pair of parallel sides.
  • A parallelogram is a quadrilateral with both pairs of opposing sides parallel.
  • A rhombus is a parallelogram with all sides of the same length.
  • A kite is a quadrilateral with two pairs of adjacent sides of the same lengths.
  • A rectangle is a parallelogram with at least one right angle.
  • A square is a rectangle with all sides of the same length.

Examples

  • A garden plot has four sides, with opposite sides parallel and all corners forming right angles. This shape is a rectangle.
  • A kite has two short sides of equal length next to each other, and two long sides of equal length next to each other. This follows the definition of a kite.
  • A slice of cheese is a quadrilateral with only one pair of parallel sides. This makes it a trapezoid.

Explanation

Think of these shapes like a family tree! A square is a special type of rectangle, which is a special type of parallelogram. Each shape inherits traits from the one above it but adds its own unique rule.

Book overview

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Chapter 11: Geometry — Classifying and Understanding Two-Dimensional Figures

  1. Lesson 1

    Lesson 1: Classifying Triangles by Sides and Angles

  2. Lesson 2Current

    Lesson 2: Defining and Identifying Quadrilaterals

  3. Lesson 3

    Lesson 3: Rectangles and Squares

  4. Lesson 4

    Lesson 4: Quadrilateral Hierarchy and Relationships

Lesson overview

Expand to review the lesson summary and core properties.

Expand

Section 1

Defining a Quadrilateral

Property

A quadrilateral is a polygon with exactly four sides and four vertices.
The sum of all interior angles in any quadrilateral equals 360°360°:

A+B+C+D=360°\angle A + \angle B + \angle C + \angle D = 360°

Examples

Section 2

Types of Quadrilaterals

Property

  • A quadrilateral is a polygon with four sides.
  • A trapezoid is a quadrilateral with one pair of parallel sides.
  • A parallelogram is a quadrilateral with both pairs of opposing sides parallel.
  • A rhombus is a parallelogram with all sides of the same length.
  • A kite is a quadrilateral with two pairs of adjacent sides of the same lengths.
  • A rectangle is a parallelogram with at least one right angle.
  • A square is a rectangle with all sides of the same length.

Examples

  • A garden plot has four sides, with opposite sides parallel and all corners forming right angles. This shape is a rectangle.
  • A kite has two short sides of equal length next to each other, and two long sides of equal length next to each other. This follows the definition of a kite.
  • A slice of cheese is a quadrilateral with only one pair of parallel sides. This makes it a trapezoid.

Explanation

Think of these shapes like a family tree! A square is a special type of rectangle, which is a special type of parallelogram. Each shape inherits traits from the one above it but adds its own unique rule.

Book overview

Jump across lessons in the current chapter without opening the full course modal.

Continue this chapter

Chapter 11: Geometry — Classifying and Understanding Two-Dimensional Figures

  1. Lesson 1

    Lesson 1: Classifying Triangles by Sides and Angles

  2. Lesson 2Current

    Lesson 2: Defining and Identifying Quadrilaterals

  3. Lesson 3

    Lesson 3: Rectangles and Squares

  4. Lesson 4

    Lesson 4: Quadrilateral Hierarchy and Relationships