Rectangle: A Parallelogram with Right Angles
- A rectangle is a parallelogram with all four angles
- Inherits all Deck 1 properties:
- Opposite sides congruent:
, - Diagonals bisect each other
- Opposite sides congruent:
Question: Are diagonals
Forward Proof: Rectangle Diagonals Are Congruent
Given:
Consider
| Statement | Reason |
|---|---|
| Given | |
| Opposite sides of a parallelogram are congruent | |
| Reflexive property | |
| All angles of a rectangle are right angles | |
| SAS | |
| CPCTC |
Converse: Congruent Diagonals → Rectangle
Given:
Consider
| Statement | Reason |
|---|---|
| Opposite sides of a parallelogram | |
| Given (diagonals are congruent) | |
| Reflexive property | |
| SSS | |
| CPCTC |
Converse Proof: Equal and Supplementary → Right Angle
Continuing from the previous slide:
| Statement | Reason |
|---|---|
| From CPCTC (previous slide) | |
| Co-interior angles ( |
|
| Substitution ( |
|
| Division | |
| All four angles are |
Opposite angles congruent + consecutive angles supplementary |
| Definition of rectangle |
Check: Does a Parallelogram Become a Rectangle?
Parallelogram
Is
State the theorem name and the required condition before answering.
Answer: Congruent Diagonals Identify a Rectangle
Yes —
Theorem: A parallelogram with congruent diagonals is a rectangle.
Key condition:
(An isosceles trapezoid has congruent diagonals but is not a parallelogram.)
The Parallelogram Family Tree: Who Inherits What
Every special parallelogram inherits all properties of the level above it.
Which Properties Belong to Which Type
| Property | ∥gram | Rectangle | Rhombus | Square |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Opposite sides parallel | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
| Opposite sides congruent | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
| Opposite angles congruent | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
| Diagonals bisect each other | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
| All angles |
— | ✓ | — | ✓ |
| All sides congruent | — | — | ✓ | ✓ |
| Diagonals congruent | — | ✓ | — | ✓ |
| Diagonals perpendicular | — | — | ✓ | ✓ |
How to Read Classification Conditions
Given parallelogram
- All sides equal → rhombus condition ✓
- Right angle → rectangle condition ✓
- Both conditions met → square
When Only the Rectangle Condition Is Met
Given parallelogram
- Sides differ:
→ not a rhombus - Right angle:
→ all four angles → rectangle ✓
When Only the Rhombus Condition Is Met
Given parallelogram
- All sides equal → rhombus ✓
- Angle
→ no right angles → not a rectangle, not a square
Check: Classify This Parallelogram Precisely
Parallelogram
What is the most specific classification? State all properties that apply.
Work through: check sides first, then angles.
Answer: Equal Sides Without Right Angles → Rhombus
- All sides
: opposite sides congruent + → no right angles → not a rectangle
Inherits all parallelogram properties, plus: all sides ≅ ✓, diagonals ⊥ ✓
Five Sufficient Conditions to Prove a Parallelogram
Show any one of:
- Both pairs of opposite sides parallel
- Both pairs of opposite sides congruent
- One pair of sides both parallel and congruent
- Both pairs of opposite angles congruent
- Diagonals bisect each other
Any single condition closes the argument.
Selecting the Right Method for Your Given Information
Given: In quadrilateral
- Method 3 applies: one pair of sides is both parallel and congruent
- No need to check the other pair
Watch Out: Perpendicular Diagonals Do Not Imply Parallelogram
Common error: "Diagonals are perpendicular → parallelogram."
Counterexample: the kite — perpendicular diagonals, not a parallelogram:
- No pair of opposite sides is parallel
- Only one diagonal bisects the other
Rule: Perpendicular diagonals identify rhombi within the parallelogram family — the parallelogram condition must be established first.
Key Takeaways: Rectangles and Special Parallelograms
✓ Rectangle diagonals:
✓ Converse: parallelogram + congruent diagonals → rectangle
✓ Hierarchy: square ⊂ {rectangle, rhombus} ⊂ parallelogram
✓ Five methods to prove parallelogram — match method to given conditions
Congruent diagonals: rectangles only
Perpendicular diagonals ≠ parallelogram (kite counterexample)
Where Parallelogram Theorems Appear Next
HSG.GPE.B.4: Coordinate proofs using parallelogram properties
- Midpoint test → formula check; slope conditions verify parallel sides
Connections to earlier work:
- Alternate interior angles (HSG.CO.C.9) powered every parallelogram proof
- Triangle congruence (HSG.CO.B.7, B.8) was the engine throughout
Click to begin the narrated lesson
Prove theorems about parallelograms