A–F
- AA similarity theorem
Two triangles are similar if they have two corresponding angles that are congruent.
- adjacent
- adjacent angles
Two non-overlapping angles with a common vertex and one common side.
and are adjacent angles: - alternate exterior angles
A pair of angles formed by a transversal intersecting two lines. The angles lie outside of the two lines and are on opposite sides of the transversal.
See angles made by a transversal.
- alternate interior angles
A pair of angles formed by a transversal intersecting two lines. The angles lie between the two lines and are on opposite sides of the transversal.
See also angles made by a transversal.
- altitude
Altitude of a triangle:
A perpendicular segment from a vertex to the line containing the base.
Altitude of a solid:
A perpendicular segment from a vertex to the plane containing the base.
- angle
Two rays that share a common endpoint called the vertex of the angle.
- angle bisector
A ray that has its endpoint at the vertex of the angle and divides the angle into two congruent angles.
- angle of depression/angle of elevation
Angle of depression: the angle formed by a horizontal line and the line of sight of a viewer looking down. Sometimes called the angle of decline.
Angle of elevation: the angle formed by a horizontal line and the line of sight of a viewer looking up. Sometimes called the angle of incline.
- angle of rotation
The fixed point a figure is rotated about is called the center of rotation. If one connects a point in the pre-image, the center of rotation, and the corresponding point in the image, they can see the angle of rotation. A counterclockwise rotation is a rotation in a positive direction. Clockwise is a negative rotation.
- angles made by a transversal
- asymptote
A line that a graph approaches, but does not reach. A graph will never touch a vertical asymptote, but it might cross a horizontal or an oblique (also called slant) asymptote.
Horizontal and oblique asymptotes indicate the general behavior of the ends of a graph in both positive and negative directions. If a rational function has a horizontal asymptote, it will not have an oblique asymptote.
Oblique asymptotes only occur when the numerator of
has a degree that is one higher than the degree of the denominator. - auxiliary line
An extra line or line segment drawn in a figure to help with a proof.
is an auxiliary line (added to the diagram of to help prove that the sum of the angles . - binomial
A polynomial with two terms.
- bisect (verb); bisector (noun) (midpoint)
To divide into two congruent parts.
A bisector can be a point or a line segment.
A perpendicular bisector divides a line segment into two congruent parts and is perpendicular to the segment.
- center of dilation
See dilation.
- circle
All points in a plane that are equidistant from a fixed point called the center of the circle. The circle is named after its center point. The distance from the center to the circle is the radius. A line segment from the center point to a point on the circle is also called a radius (plural radii, when referring to more than one).
Notation:
- circumscribe
To draw a circle that passes through all of the vertices of a polygon. The circle is called the circumcircle.
All of these polygons are inscribed in the circles.
- clockwise / counterclockwise
clockwise: Moving in the same direction, as the hands on a clock move.
counterclockwise: Moving in the opposite direction, as the hands on a clock move.
- closure
A set is closed (under an operation) if and only if the operation on any two elements of the set produces another element of the same set.
- coincides (superimposed or carried onto)
When working with transformations, we use words like coincide, superimposed, or carried onto to refer to two points or line segments that occupy the same position on the plane.
- collinear, collinearity
When three or more points lie in a line.
Note: Any two points can define a line.
Noncollinear: Not collinear.
- complement (in probability)
The complement of an event is the subset of outcomes in the sample space that are not in the event. This means that in any given experiment, either the event or its complement will happen, but not both. The Complement Rule states that the sum of the probabilities of an event and its complement must equal 1.
- complementary angles
Two angles whose measures add up to
. - completing the square
Completing the Square changes the form of a quadratic function from standard form to vertex form. It can be used for solving a quadratic equation and is one method for deriving the quadratic formula.
- complex conjugates
A pair of complex numbers whose product is a nonzero real number.
The complex numbers
and form a conjugate pair. The product
, a real number. The conjugate of a complex number
is the complex number . The conjugate of a complex number is represented with the notation
. - complex number
A number with a real part and an imaginary part. A complex number can be written in the form
, where and are real numbers and is the imaginary unit. When
, the complex number can be written simply as It is then referred to as a pure imaginary number. - concave and convex
Polygons are either convex or concave.
Convex polygon— no internal angle that measures more than
. If any two points are connected with a line segment in the convex polygon, the segment will lie on or inside the polygon. Concave polygon—at least one internal angle measures more than
. If it’s possible to find two points on the polygon that when connected by a line segment, the segment exits the concave polygon. - concentric circles
Circles with a common center.
- conditional frequency
See two-way relative frequency table.
- conditional probability
The measure of an event, given that another event has occurred.
The conditional probability of an event
is the probability that the event will occur, given the knowledge that an event has already occurred. This probability is written , notation for the probability of given . The likelihood of an event or outcome occurring, based on the occurrence of a previous event or outcome.
Notation:
The probability that event will occur given the knowledge that event has already occurred. In the case where
and are independent (where event has no effect on the probability of event ); the conditional probability of event given event is simply the probability of event , that is, If events
and are not independent, then the probability of the intersection of and (the probability that both events occur) is defined by From this definition, the conditional probability
is obtained by dividing by : - conditional statement
A conditional statement (also called an “if-then” statement) is a statement with a hypothesis
, followed by a conclusion . Another way to define a conditional statement is to say, “If this happens, then that will happen.” . The converse of a conditional statement switches the conclusion
, and the hypothesis to say: . A true conditional statement does not guarantee that the converse is true.
Examples: conditional statement: If it rains, the roads will be wet.
Converse: If the roads are wet, then it must have rained.
The converse is not necessarily true. Perhaps a pipe broke and flooded the road.
- congruence statement
A mathematical statement that uses the
symbol. Examples: Only figures or shapes can be congruent. Numbers are equal.
- congruent (CPCTC)
Two triangles (figures) are congruent if they are the same size and same shape. Two geometric figures are defined to be congruent if there is a sequence of rigid motions that carries one onto the other.
The symbol for congruent is
. If it’s given that two triangles (figures) are congruent, then the Corresponding Parts of the Congruent Triangles (figures) are Congruent (CPCTC).
- conjecture
A mathematical statement that has not yet been rigorously proven. Conjectures arise when one notices a pattern that holds true for many cases. However, just because a pattern holds true for many cases does not mean that the pattern will hold true for all cases. When a conjecture is proven, it becomes a theorem.
- constant of proportionality/ constant of variation
The constant of proportionality (also called constant of variation) is encountered in direct variation and inverse variation equations.
It is usually symbolized by
. - construction
Creating a diagram of geometric figures and items such as perpendicular lines or a regular pentagon using only a compass and straightedge.
A construction yields an exactly reproducible and unambiguous result, of which all properties can be measured as expected (within the accuracy of the instruments use.)
Constructing an angle bisector:
- converse statement
See conditional statement.
- corresponding angles
Angles that are in the same relative position.
- corresponding parts (in a triangle)
The word corresponding refers to parts that match between two congruent figures. Corresponding angles and corresponding sides will have the same measurements in congruent figures.
- corresponding points / sides
Points, sides, and angles can all be corresponding. It means they are in the same relative position.
- counterexample
An example that disproves a statement or conjecture. One counterexample can disprove a conjecture based on many examples.
Statement: All blondes drive red cars.
Counterexample: My mom is blonde, but her car is silver.
- CPCTC
See congruent (CPCTC).
- cube root
A value that, when multiplied by itself, three times gives the number.
Example:
, so the cube root of is or . , so the cube root of is or . The mathematical symbol that indicates to find the cube root is a radical sign with a small
on the outside. . - definition
A statement of the meaning of a word or symbol that is accepted by the mathematical community. A good mathematical definition uses previously defined terms and the symbol that represents it. Once a word has been defined, it can be used in subsequent definitions.
- degree
A degree is the measure of an angle of rotation that is equal to
of a complete rotation around a fixed point. A measure of degrees would be written as . - diagonal
Any line segment that connects nonconsecutive vertices of a polygon.
- dilation
A transformation that produces an image that is the same shape as the pre-image but is of a different size. A description of a dilation includes the scale factor and the center of dilation.
A dilation is a transformation of the plane, such that if
is the center of the dilation and a nonzero number is the scale factor, then is the image of point , if , , and are collinear and . - direct variation
- disjoint
See mutually exclusive.
- equality statements
A mathematical sentence that states two values are equal.
It contains an equal sign.
- equidistant
A shortened way of saying equally distant; the same distance from each other or in relation to other things.
- equilateral, equilateral triangle
Equilateral means equal side lengths.
In an equilateral triangle, all of the sides have the same length.
- exterior angle of a triangle (remote interior angles)
An exterior angle of a triangle is an angle formed by one side of the triangle and the extension of an adjacent side of the triangle. There are two exterior angles at every vertex of a triangle.
- exterior angle theorem
The measure of an exterior angle in any triangle is equal to the sum of the two remote interior angles.
- extraneous solution
A derived solution to an equation that is invalid in the original equation.
- factored form of a quadratic function
Go to quadratic function.
- false negative/positive
The result of a test that appears negative when it should not. An example of a false negative would be if a particular test designed to detect cancer returns a negative result, but the person actually does have cancer.
A false positive is where you receive a positive result for a test, when you should have received a negative result.
- flow proof
See proof: types—flow, two-column, paragraph.
- Fundamental Theorem of Algebra
An
degree polynomial function has roots, but some of those roots might be complex numbers.
G–L
- geometric mean
A special type of average where
numbers are multiplied together and then the root is taken. For two numbers, the geometric mean would be the square root. For three numbers, it would be the cube root. Example: The geometric mean of
and is . The geometric mean of two numbers
and is the number such that . - hexagon
A six-sided polygon.
- horizontal asymptote
A line that the graph approaches but does not reach. Exponential functions have a horizontal asymptote. The horizontal asymptote is the value the function approaches as
either gets infinitely larger or smaller. An asymptote is an imaginary line, but it is often shown as a dotted line on the graph. As
gets smaller, the graph of approaches the horizontal asymptote, . As
gets larger, the graph of approaches the horizontal asymptote, . As
gets smaller, the graph of approaches the horizontal asymptote, . See also asymptote.
- horizontal shift
See transformations on a function.
- hypotenuse
The longest side in a right triangle.
The side opposite the right angle.
- image
A picture; a visual representation of a thing. See pre-image / image.
- imaginary number
See complex number.
- independent event / dependent event
When two events are said to be independent of each other, the probability that one event occurs in no way affects the probability of the other event occurring.
When you flip two coins, each flip is an independent event.
An event is dependent if the occurrence of the first event affects the occurrence of the second so that the probability is changed.
Example: Suppose there are
balls in a box. What is the chance of getting a green ball out of the box on the first try? A green ball is selected and removed in event . What is the chance of getting a green ball on the second try? - inscribed in a circle
- intersection of sets
The intersection of two sets
and , is the set containing all of the elements of that also belong to . The symbol for intersection is . For example: If
and then . - inverse trigonometric ratio
The inverse of a trigonometric function is used to obtain the measure of an angle when the trigonometric ratio is known.
Example: The inverse of sine is denoted as arcsine, or on a calculator it will appear as
. If
and the measure of the angle is needed, write to express this. The answer to the expression is the measure of the angle. All of the inverse trigonometric functions are written the same way.
- inverse variation
- joint events
Events that can occur at the same time.
Two-way tables show joints. See two-way tables.
- line of symmetry
The vertical line that divides the graph into two congruent halves, sometimes called axis of symmetry.
The equation for the line of symmetry in a coordinate plane is always:
- linear function
- linear pair
Two supplementary angles that share a vertex and a side.
A linear pair always make a line.
M–R
- marginal frequency
See two-way tables.
- median in a triangle
A line segment in a triangle that extends from any vertex to the midpoint of the opposite side.
- midline of a triangle
is the midline of . - midline of a triangle theorem
The midline of a triangle or the midsegment theorem states that the segment connecting the midpoints of two sides of a triangle is parallel to the third side and half as long as the third side.
- midpoint
A point on a line segment that divides it into two equal parts.
The formula for finding half the distance between two points (or the midpoint
) in a coordinate grid is: See also bisect.
- model, mathematical
Modeling with mathematics is the practice of making sense of the world through a mathematical perspective. A mathematical model could be an equation, graph, diagram, formula, sketch, computer program, or other representation that will help you to study different components of a function or to make predictions about behavior.
- mutually exclusive
Two events are mutually exclusive if they cannot occur at the same time. Another word that means mutually exclusive is disjoint. If two events are disjoint, then the probability of them both occurring at the same time is 0.
- mutually exclusive event
Both events can’t happen at the same time. It must be one or the other, but not both.
Example: heads and tails are mutually exclusive when flipping a coin.
- n-gon
A polygon with
number of sides. See polygon.
- number sets (systems)
Your first experience with number sets was probably when you learned to count. This set is called the Natural numbers,
. When you added the set grew to be the Whole numbers, . The need for Integers, , arose when you subtracted a large number from a smaller number. Then you needed the Rational numbers, , when you started dividing. Other number sets (or systems) are needed in more advanced mathematics. - octagon
An eight-sided polygon.
- opposite angles, opposite vertices
Opposite angles in a quadrilateral do not share a side.
A vertex (plural, vertices) is part of an angle.
- opposite side in a triangle
A side opposite an angle in a triangle is the side that is not part of the angle.
- opposite sides (in a parallelogram or an even-sided polygon)
If two sides in a parallelogram are parallel, they must be opposite sides.
If two sides in an even-sided polygon are parallel, they must be opposite sides.
- orientation
The orientation is determined by the order in which a figure’s vertices are labeled. In the diagram, the vertices of the green pentagon are labeled from
to to to to in a clockwise direction. In the blue pentagon, the orientation of the vertices has changed. The corresponding vertices go in a counterclockwise direction from
to to to to . - origin
The origin is a starting point. The coordinates for every other point are based on how far that point is from the origin. At the origin, both
and are equal to zero, and the -axis and the -axis intersect. - parabola
The graph of every equation that can be written in the form
, where is in the shape of a parabola. It looks a bit like a U but it has a very specific shape. Moving from the vertex, it is the exact same shape on the left as it is on the right. (It is symmetric.) The graph of the parent function or
follows the pattern: move right 1 step, move up
or move right 2 steps, move up
or move right 3 steps, move up
or
- parallelogram
A quadrilateral in which the opposite sides are parallel.
- pentagon
A five-sided polygon.
- perpendicular bisector
The line (line segment or ray) that divides a line segment into two equal lengths and makes a right angle with the line segment it divides.
- polygon
Any 2-D shape formed with line segments that connect at their endpoints, making a closed figure. The location where any two line segments connect is called a vertex.
Triangles, quadrilaterals, pentagons, and hexagons are all examples of polygons. The name identifies how many sides the shape has. For example, a triangle has three sides, a quadrilateral has four sides, a pentagon five sides, and an octagon eight sides. A regular polygon is made up of congruent line segments.
In a regular polygon, all sides are congruent, and all angles are congruent.
- postulate
A simple and useful statement in geometry that is accepted by the mathematical community as true without proof.
- pre-image / image
The pre-image is the original figure. The image is the new figure created from the pre-image through a sequence of transformations or a dilation.
- preserves distance and angle measure
Measurements are not changed under a rigid transformation.
- proof by contradiction
A way to justify a claim is to use a proof by contradiction method, in which one assumes the opposite of the claim is true, and shows that this leads to a contradiction of something that is known to be true.
- proof: types—flow, two-column, paragraph
- properties of equality
The properties of equality describe operations that can be performed on each side of the equal sign (
) and still ensure that the expressions remain equivalent. In the table below,
, , and stand for arbitrary numbers in the rational, real, or complex number systems. The properties of equality are true in these number systems. Reflexive property of equality
Symmetric property of equality
If
, then Transitive property of equality
If
and , then Addition property of equality
If
, then Subtraction property of equality
If
, then Multiplication property of equality
If
, then Division property of equality
If
and , then Substitution property of equality
If
, then may be substituted for in any expression containing - proportion: proportionality statement
A proportion is a statement that two ratios are equal.
- quadratic formula
The quadratic formula allows us to solve any quadratic equation that’s in the form
. The letters , , and in the formula represent the coefficients of the terms. - quadratic function
- quadratic inequality
A function whose degree is
and where the is not always exactly equal to the function. These types of functions use symbols called inequality symbols that include the symbols we know as less than , greater than , less than or equal to , and greater than or equal to . Example:
- quadrilaterals: types
A quadrilateral is a four-sided polygon. See the diagram for various types of quadrilaterals.
- radical
A radical is the mathematical inverse of an exponent. This is the symbol for a radical:
. It is also called a square root symbol, but that is only when it’s asking for the number that when multiplied by itself gives you the number inside the . (The is not usually written.) It can be used to indicate a cube root , a fourth root , or higher. (A root that is higher than is written in.) - radii
Plural of radius. See circle.
- ratio
A ratio compares the size or amount of two values.
Here is a sentence that compares apples to oranges as shown in the diagram below: “We have five apples for every three oranges.” It describes a ratio of
to or . A ratio can also be written as a fraction, in this case . Compare oranges to apples. The ratio changes to
or . The two previous ratios are called part-to-part ratios. Another way to write a ratio is to compare a part to a whole.
Compare apples to the total amount of fruit. The ratio changes to
or . Ratios can be scaled up or down. There are
bags of fruit, each containing oranges and apples. The ratio to still represents the number of apples compared to the number of oranges. But the ratio to also compares the number of apples to the number of oranges. - rational exponent (fractional exponent)
Rational exponents (also called fractional exponents) are expressions with exponents that are rational numbers (as opposed to integers).
- ray
A part of a line that has a fixed starting point (endpoint), and then continues toward infinity.
Notation:
– ray A ray is named using its endpoint first, and then any other point on the ray.
- reasoning – deductive/inductive
Two Types of Reasoning
Inductive reasoning:
from a number of observations, a general conclusion is drawn.
Deductive reasoning:
from a general premise (something we know), specific results are predicted.
Observations
General Premise
Each time I make two lines intersect, the opposite angles are congruent. I have tried this 20 times and it seems to be true.
Conclusion:
Opposite angles formed by intersecting lines are always congruent.
Given: Angles 1, 2, 3, and 4 are formed by two intersecting lines.
Prove: Opposite angles formed by intersecting lines are always congruent.
- rectangle
See quadrilaterals: types.
- reference angle
The acute angle between the terminal ray of an angle in standard position and the
-axis. - reflection
A reflection is a rigid transformation (isometry). In a reflection, the pre-image and image points are the same distance from the line of reflection; the segment connecting corresponding points is perpendicular to the line of reflection.
The orientation of the image is reversed.
- regular polygon
See polygon.
- relative frequency table (statistics)
When the data in a two-way table is written as percentages
See two-way frequency table.
- rhombus
A quadrilateral in which all sides are congruent.
- rigid transformation
Also called an isometry. The word rigid means that the pre-image and image are congruent. The rigid transformations include translation, rotation, and reflection.
- roots: real and imaginary
The solutions of an equation in the form
. - rotation
A rotation is a rigid transformation. In a rotation, all points remain the same distance from the center of rotation, move in the same direction, and through the same central angle. The orientation of the pre-image remains the same.
- rotational symmetry
See symmetry.
S–X
- same-side interior angles
See angles made by a transversal.
- SAS triangle similarity
See triangle similarity.
- scale factor
The ratio of any two corresponding lengths in two similar geometric figures.
- side-splitter theorem
The side-splitter theorem is related to the midline of a triangle theorem. It extends the rule to say if a line intersects two sides of a triangle and is parallel to the third side of the triangle, it divides those two sides proportionally.
- similarity
A 2-D figure is similar to another if the second can be obtained from the first by a sequence of rotations, reflections, translations, and dilations.
- special right triangles
There are two special right triangles. They are special because they can be solved without using trigonometry.
- square
See quadrilaterals: types.
- square root
The square root of a number is one of the two identical factors that when multiplied together equal the number.
Example:
6, so a square root of is . Note that
too. That means is also a square root of . The mathematical symbol that indicates to find the square root is a radical sign . - square root function
A function that has a radical (square root sign) and the independent variable
is under the square root sign . Equation:
Domain:
Range:
Always increasing
- SSS triangle similarity
See triangle similarity.
- standard form of a quadratic function
- straight angle
When the legs of an angle are pointing in exactly opposite directions, the two legs form a single straight line through the vertex of the angle. The measure of a straight angle is always
. It looks like a straight line. - supplementary angles
Two angles whose measures add up to exactly
. - symmetric
If a figure can be folded or divided in half so that the two halves match exactly, then such a figure is called a symmetric figure. The fold line is the line of symmetry.
- symmetry
A line that reflects a figure onto itself is called a line of symmetry.
A figure that can be carried onto itself by a rotation is said to have rotational symmetry.
- tessellation
A tessellation is a regular pattern made up of flat shapes repeated and joined together without any gaps or overlaps. Many regular polygons tessellate, meaning they can fit together without any gaps.
- theorem
A theorem is a statement that can be demonstrated to be true by using definitions, postulates, properties, and previously proven theorems.
The process of showing a theorem to be correct is called a proof.
- transformations on a function (non-rigid)
A dilation is a nonrigid transformation
because the shape changes in size. It will make the function change faster or slower depending on the value of . If , it will grow faster and look like it has been stretched. If , the function will change more slowly and will appear to be fatter. A dilation is also called a vertical stretch. - transformations on a function (rigid)
A shift up, down, left, or right, or a vertical or horizontal reflection on the graph of a function is called a rigid transformation.
Vertical shift
Up when
Down when
Horizontal shift
Left when
Right when
Reflection
reflection over the -axis reflection over the -axis A dilation is a nonrigid transformation. It will make the function changes faster or slower depending on the value of
. If , it will grow faster and look like it has been stretched. If , the function will grow more slowly and will appear to be fatter. - translation
A translation is a rigid transformation.
- transversal
A line that passes through two lines in the same plane at two distinct points. The two lines do not need to be parallel. But when the lines are parallel, several special angle relationships are formed.
- trapezoid
A quadrilateral with exactly one pair of parallel opposite sides.
(Note: A trapezoid can also be defined as a quadrilateral with at least one pair of opposite sides that are parallel. This definition makes it possible for parallelograms to be a special type of trapezoid.)
In an isosceles trapezoid, the two opposite sides that are not parallel are congruent and form congruent angles with the parallel sides. This feature of an isosceles trapezoid only exists if the trapezoid is not a parallelogram.
- tree diagram
A tool in probability and statistics used to calculate the number of possible outcomes of an event, as well as list those possible outcomes in an organized manner.
- triangle congruence criteria: ASA, SAS, AAS, SSS
Two triangles are congruent if all three sides and all three angles are congruent. But sometimes only three pieces of information are sufficient to prove two triangles congruent.
ASA stands for “angle-side-angle.”
SAS stands for “side-angle-side.”
AAS stands for “angle-angle-side.”
SSS stands for “side-side-side.”
- triangle similarity
Two triangles are said to be similar if their corresponding angles are congruent and the corresponding sides are in proportion. Similar triangles are the same shape, but not necessarily the same size.
There are three similarity patterns that provide sufficient information to prove two triangles are similar:
AA Similarity
SAS Similarity
SSS Similarity
- trigonometric ratios in right triangles: sine A, cosine A, tangent A
An operation that relates the measure of an angle with a ratio of the lengths of the sides in a right triangle. There are three trigonometric ratios, plus their reciprocals. See Reciprocal trigonometric functions for definitions.
abbreviated abbreviated abbreviated A trigonometric ratio always includes a reference angle.
In right triangle
, the trigonometric ratios are defined as: Note that each trigonometric function above references the angle
. If angle was referenced as the angle, the opposite and adjacent sides would be in reference to angle , and they would switch sides. - trinomial
A polynomial with three terms.
- two-column proof
See proof:types—flow, two-column, paragraph.
- two-way frequency and two-way relative frequency table
A two-way frequency chart simply lists the number of each occurrence.
Average is more than 100 texts sent per day
Average is less than 100 texts sent per day
Total
# of Teenagers
20
4
24
# of Adults
2
22
24
Totals
22
26
48
In a two-way relative frequency table, each number in the cells is divided by the grand total. That is because we are looking for a percentage that shows us how the data compares to the grand total.
Average is more than 100 texts sent per day
Average is less than 100 texts sent per day
Total
% of Teenagers
42%
8%
50%
% of Adults
4%
46%
50%
% of Total
46%
54%
100%
In this table, the ‘inner’ values represent a percent and are called conditional frequencies. The conditional values in a relative frequency table can be calculated as percentages of one of the following:
the whole table (relative frequency of table)
the rows (relative frequency of rows)
the columns (relative frequency of column)
- two-way table
A table listing two categorical variables whose values have been paired such that the possible values of one variable make up the rows and the possible values for the other variable make up the columns. The green cells on this table are where the joint frequency numbers are located. They are called joint frequency because you are joining one variable from the row and one variable from the column. The marginal frequency numbers are the numbers on the edges of a table. On this table, the marginal frequency numbers are in the purple cells.
- union
The union of two sets is a set containing all elements that are in set
or in set (or possibly both). The symbol for union is . For example,
. - vertex
See angle.
- vertex form
See quadratic function.
- vertical angles
The angles opposite each other when two lines cross. They are always congruent.
- vertical asymptote
See asymptote.
- vertical shift
See transformations on a function (rigid).
- vertical stretch
See transformations on a function (non-rigid).
- x-intercept
The point(s) where a line or a curve cross the
-axis. The -value of the point will be . A non-horizontal line will only cross the -axis once. A curve could cross the -axis several times.
Y–Z
- zeros, roots, solutions
The real solutions to a quadratic equation are where it is equal to zero. They are also called zeros or roots. Real zeros correspond to the
-intercepts of the graph of a function.