Congruence of Triangles
The Triangle and its Properties: Congruence of Triangles
Congruence of Triangles
Congruence of Triangles
What you'll learn
- Congruent triangles — same shape AND same size; one fits exactly over the other.
- CPCT — Corresponding Parts of Congruent Triangles are equal.
- Four congruence criteria: SSS, SAS, ASA, RHS.
- When two triangles are congruent, all 6 parts (3 sides + 3 angles) are equal.
Key concepts
Congruence criteria
| Criterion | Full Name | What must be equal |
|---|---|---|
| SSS | Side-Side-Side | All 3 sides |
| SAS | Side-Angle-Side | 2 sides + included angle |
| ASA | Angle-Side-Angle | 2 angles + included side |
| RHS | Right angle-Hypotenuse-Side | Right angle + hypotenuse + one side |
AAA is NOT a congruence criterion — triangles can be same shape (similar) but different size. SSA is NOT a congruence criterion — ambiguous case.
CPCT
Once triangles are proved congruent, we can state: ∠A = ∠D, ∠B = ∠E, ∠C = ∠F and AB = DE, BC = EF, AC = DF (corresponding parts).
Worked example
△ABC and △PQR: AB = PQ = 5 cm, BC = QR = 7 cm, ∠B = ∠Q = 60°. Are they congruent?
Given: AB = PQ (side), ∠B = ∠Q (included angle), BC = QR (side).
Criterion: SAS → △ABC ≅ △PQR by SAS.
By CPCT: AC = PR and ∠A = ∠P, ∠C = ∠R.
Quick check
- Name the four congruence criteria.
- Why is AAA not a congruence criterion?
- Two right triangles have hypotenuse = 13 cm and one leg = 5 cm each. Are they congruent? Which criterion?
- What does CPCT stand for and when can we use it?
Open the Practice tab for graded questions on Congruence of Triangles.
Key Takeaways (TL;DR)
- What you'll learn
- Key concepts
- Worked example
- Quick check
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