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Lesson 8 ~35 min Unit 3 · Geometry +85 XP

Congruence of Triangles

Two triangles are congruent when they are identical in every way. Master the four tests -- SSS, SAS, AAS and RHS -- and prove triangles match perfectly.

Today's hook: Two triangles both have sides 5 cm, 6 cm and 7 cm. Are they definitely identical? What if two triangles both have angles 40°, 60° and 80° -- are they definitely identical? Your intuition here is the key to everything.
0/5QUESTS
Think First
warm-up

Two triangles both have sides 5 cm, 6 cm and 7 cm. Are they definitely identical? What if two triangles both have angles 40°, 60° and 80° -- are they definitely identical? Explain your reasoning.

Record your answer in your workbook.
1
The Big Idea
+5 XP to read

Congruence means identical in every way -- same shape, same size, same angles, same side lengths. If two triangles are congruent, every corresponding part matches. There are exactly four ways to prove this, and one famous way that does not work.

An SSS proof uses three sides. An SAS proof needs the angle between the two sides. AAS uses two angles and any corresponding side. RHS is the special right-triangle case that SSA is not.

5 7 6 5 7 6 same sides = same triangle
$\triangle ABC \equiv \triangle DEF$ (test)
Four tests only
SSS, SAS, AAS, RHS. Memorise them all -- no substitutes.
SSA never works
Same two sides and a non-included angle can make two different triangles.
Match vertices
$A \leftrightarrow D$, $B \leftrightarrow E$, $C \leftrightarrow F$ always.
2
What You'll Master
objectives

Know

  • The four congruence tests: SSS, SAS, AAS, RHS
  • What congruence means for corresponding sides and angles
  • Why SSA is not a valid test

Understand

  • Why the included angle matters for SAS
  • How congruence proofs are structured step by step
  • Why matching vertices is essential in notation

Can Do

  • Identify which congruence test applies to any pair of triangles
  • Write formal congruence proofs with clear reasoning
  • Use congruence to deduce unknown sides and angles
3
Words You Need
vocabulary
CongruentIdentical in shape and size. Corresponding sides and angles are equal. Symbol: $\equiv$.
SSSSide-Side-Side. Three pairs of corresponding sides equal.
SASSide-Angle-Side. Two sides and the included angle equal.
AASAngle-Angle-Side. Two angles and a corresponding side equal.
RHSRight angle-Hypotenuse-Side. Right triangle with hypotenuse and one leg equal.
CorrespondingMatching parts in the same relative position in congruent figures.
4
Spot the Trap
heads-up

Wrong: Using SSA as a congruence test. Two different triangles can have the same two sides and a non-included angle.

Right: SAS requires the angle to be included between the two sides. SSA is never a valid test.

Wrong: Writing the congruence statement in the wrong order, so corresponding parts do not match.

Right: Always match vertices: if $\triangle ABC \equiv \triangle DEF$, then $A$ matches $D$, $B$ matches $E$, $C$ matches $F$.

5
The Four Tests
+5 XP

These are the only four ways to prove two triangles are identical. Memorise them all. Each test specifies exactly which matching parts force the triangles to be congruent.

SSS is the most straightforward -- match all three sides and the triangles must be identical. SAS is powerful but needs the angle between the sides. AAS works because two angles fix the shape, and one side fixes the size. RHS is the only case where SSA is valid -- because the right angle removes the ambiguity.

SSS three sides rigid frame SAS two sides + included angle AAS two angles + corresponding side RHS right angle + hypotenuse + side
SSS  |  SAS  |  AAS  |  RHS
SSS = rigid triangle
A triangle frame with fixed side lengths cannot change shape.
SAS = hinge
Two sticks joined at a fixed angle make one rigid shape.
AAS = shape + size
Two angles fix the shape. One side fixes how large it is.
6
Why SSA Fails
+5 XP

Two triangles can have the same two sides and a non-included angle, but still be different shapes. This is called the ambiguous case. The only exception is RHS, where the right angle constraint removes the ambiguity.

Imagine a side of 5 cm, a side of 7 cm, and an angle of 30° that is not between them. You can draw two completely different triangles. The 30° angle could open to the left or the right, creating two possible positions for the third vertex.

7 5 5 two possible triangles
SSA ≠ congruence
Angle must be included
For SAS, the angle sits between the two known sides.
RHS is the exception
The 90° angle and hypotenuse fix everything -- no ambiguity.
Test before you claim
Always verify the angle is included before calling it SAS.
7
Match the Vertices
+5 XP

The congruence statement $\triangle ABC \equiv \triangle DEF$ is not just shorthand -- it is a matching contract. $A$ corresponds to $D$, $B$ to $E$, $C$ to $F$. This means every corresponding side and angle must match in that exact order.

If $\triangle ABC \equiv \triangle DEF$ by SAS, then side $AB$ corresponds to side $DE$, side $BC$ to $EF$, and the included angle $\angle B$ corresponds to $\angle E$. Get the order wrong and your proof falls apart.

A B C D E F A ↔ D
$AB = DE$, $BC = EF$, $AC = DF$
Name matching pairs
First vertex matches first, second matches second, third matches third.
Corresponding sides
$AB \leftrightarrow DE$, $BC \leftrightarrow EF$, $CA \leftrightarrow FD$.
Check your statement
Read it back: does every letter pair make sense?
8
Using Congruence to Find Unknowns
+5 XP

Once you prove two triangles are congruent, you unlock every corresponding part. Unknown sides become known. Unknown angles become known. This is the real power of congruence -- it lets you transfer information from one triangle to another.

The standard pattern: prove congruence first using one of the four tests, then state that corresponding parts are equal (CPCTC -- Corresponding Parts of Congruent Triangles are Congruent). This second step often gives you the value you actually need.

50° 70° ? 50° 70° ? ? = 180 - 50 - 70 = 60°
CPCTC: congruent $\Rightarrow$ all parts match
Prove first, find second
Always establish congruence before claiming equal parts.
Label diagrams
Mark equal sides and angles as you spot them.
State the test
End every proof with the test name in brackets.
Watch Me Solve It · Identifying the Test
+15 XP per step
Q1
PROBLEM
In triangles $ABC$ and $DEF$, $AB = DE = 5$ cm, $BC = EF = 7$ cm, and $\angle B = \angle E = 50°$. Which congruence test applies?
  1. 1
    List the given information
    $AB = DE$ (one pair of sides), $BC = EF$ (second pair of sides), $\angle B = \angle E$ (one pair of angles)
    Organise what you know before deciding on a test.
  2. 2
    Check the position of the angle
    The angle $\angle B$ is between sides $AB$ and $BC$. The angle $\angle E$ is between sides $DE$ and $EF$.
    The angle is included between the two known sides -- this is the critical check.
  3. 3
    Name the test
    Two sides and the included angle are equal → SAS (Side-Angle-Side)
  4. 4
    Write the conclusion
    $\triangle ABC \equiv \triangle DEF$ (SAS)
    Vertices match: $A \leftrightarrow D$, $B \leftrightarrow E$, $C \leftrightarrow F$.
Answer$\triangle ABC \equiv \triangle DEF$ (SAS)
Watch Me Solve It · Formal Proof
+15 XP per step
Q2
PROBLEM
$ABCD$ is a parallelogram. Prove that $\triangle ABC \equiv \triangle CDA$.
  1. 1
    State what you are proving
    In triangles $ABC$ and $CDA$:
    Always begin a formal proof by naming the two triangles.
  2. 2
    List matching sides with reasons
    $AB = CD$ (opposite sides of a parallelogram)
    $BC = DA$ (opposite sides of a parallelogram)
    In a parallelogram, opposite sides are equal in length.
  3. 3
    Identify the common side
    $AC = CA$ (common side)
    The diagonal $AC$ is shared by both triangles. Note the reversed letter order.
  4. 4
    State the conclusion with test
    $\therefore \triangle ABC \equiv \triangle CDA$ (SSS)
    All three pairs of corresponding sides are equal. The symbol $\therefore$ means "therefore."
Answer$\triangle ABC \equiv \triangle CDA$ (SSS)
Watch Me Solve It · Finding Unknowns
+15 XP per step
Q3
PROBLEM
In the diagram, $AB = AC$ and $BD = CD$. (a) Prove $\triangle ABD \equiv \triangle ACD$. (b) Hence, find $\angle BAD$ if $\angle CAD = 35°$.
  1. 1
    List matching sides with reasons
    $AB = AC$ (given), $BD = CD$ (given), $AD = AD$ (common side)
    Three pairs of sides: two given, one common.
  2. 2
    State the congruence
    $\triangle ABD \equiv \triangle ACD$ (SSS)
    All three pairs of corresponding sides are equal.
  3. 3
    Use CPCTC to find the unknown angle
    $\angle BAD = \angle CAD$ (corresponding angles of congruent triangles)
    Once triangles are proven congruent, all corresponding parts are equal.
  4. 4
    Substitute the known value
    $\angle BAD = 35°$
    Since $\angle CAD = 35°$ and the angles correspond, $\angle BAD = 35°$.
Answer$\angle BAD = 35°$
9
Common Pitfalls
heads-up
Using SSA as a valid test
Writing "SSA" in a proof or selecting it in a multiple choice question. Two different triangles can share the same two sides and a non-included angle -- this is the ambiguous case.
Fix: remember the four valid tests -- SSS, SAS, AAS, RHS. If the angle is not included between the two sides, it is not SAS and it is not valid.
Writing vertices in the wrong order
Stating $\triangle ABC \equiv \triangle DEF$ when $A$ actually corresponds to $F$, not $D$. This makes every subsequent claim about corresponding parts incorrect.
Fix: trace the matching carefully. If $\angle A = \angle D$ and $\angle B = \angle E$, then $C$ must match $F$. Write the statement to reflect this.
Forgetting to state the test at the end
Writing "$\triangle ABC \equiv \triangle DEF$" without specifying which test justifies it. In formal proofs, the test name in brackets is required.
Fix: end every congruence proof with the test in brackets: (SSS), (SAS), (AAS), or (RHS).
Copy Into Your Books

The Four Tests

  • SSS -- three sides equal
  • SAS -- two sides, included angle
  • AAS -- two angles, corresponding side
  • RHS -- right angle, hypotenuse, side

SSA is Not Valid

  • Two sides + non-included angle
  • Can produce two different triangles
  • Called the ambiguous case
  • Exception: RHS (right angle fixes it)

Vertex Matching

  • $A \leftrightarrow D$, $B \leftrightarrow E$, $C \leftrightarrow F$
  • Corresponding sides match in order
  • Corresponding angles match in order

Proof Structure

  • Name the two triangles
  • List equal parts with reasons
  • State test in brackets
  • Use CPCTC for unknowns

How are you completing this lesson?

D
Brain Trainer · Identify the Test
4 problems

Four quick problems -- identify which congruence test applies, or state "not possible." Work each one, then reveal the answer.

  1. 1 In triangles $PQR$ and $STU$, $\angle P = \angle S = 40°$, $\angle Q = \angle T = 70°$, and $QR = TU = 8$ cm. Which test?

    AAS. Two angles and a corresponding side. Since two angles are equal, the third must also be equal, so we effectively know all angles and one corresponding side.$\triangle PQR \equiv \triangle STU$ (AAS)
  2. 2 Two right triangles have hypotenuse 13 cm and one leg 5 cm. Which test?

    RHS. Right angle, hypotenuse and one side. This is the special case where SSA works because the right angle removes ambiguity.RHS
  3. 3 In triangles $XYZ$ and $LMN$, $XY = LM = 6$ cm, $YZ = MN = 9$ cm, and $\angle X = \angle L = 35°$. The angle is not included. Can we prove congruence?

    No. This is SSA -- two sides and a non-included angle. Two different triangles could satisfy these conditions. Not a valid congruence test.Not possible
  4. 4 Triangle $ABC$ has sides $AB = 4$ cm, $BC = 5$ cm, $CA = 6$ cm. Triangle $DEF$ has $DE = 4$ cm, $EF = 5$ cm, $FD = 6$ cm. Which test?

    SSS. All three pairs of corresponding sides are equal. The order given ($CA$ and $FD$) still matches because the sides correspond correctly.$\triangle ABC \equiv \triangle DEF$ (SSS)
Complete in your workbook.
MC1
All three sides
+10 XP

Which test proves two triangles congruent if all three sides of one equal the corresponding three sides of the other?

MC2
Right triangle test
+10 XP

Two right-angled triangles have equal hypotenuses and one pair of equal legs. The correct test is:

MC3
The ambiguous case
+10 XP

In triangles $ABC$ and $DEF$, $AB = DE$, $BC = EF$, and $\angle A = \angle D$. Can we prove congruence?

MC4
Corresponding parts
+10 XP

If $\triangle ABC \equiv \triangle DEF$ by SAS, and $AB = 5$ cm, $BC = 7$ cm, then:

MC5
Angles and one side
+10 XP

Two triangles have angles $50°$, $60°$, $70°$ and side 8 cm opposite the $50°$ angle. They are:

Q6
Isosceles triangle proof
+15 XP
Q6
SHORT ANSWER
In the diagram, $AB = AC$ and $BD = CD$. (a) Prove that $\triangle ABD \equiv \triangle ACD$. (b) Hence, prove that $\angle BAD = \angle CAD$. (c) What does this tell you about the line $AD$?
Write your working in your book.
Q7
Rectangle diagonals
+15 XP
Q7
SHORT ANSWER
$ABCD$ is a rectangle. The diagonals $AC$ and $BD$ intersect at point $E$. (a) Prove that $\triangle ABE \equiv \triangle CDE$. (b) Prove that the diagonals of a rectangle are equal in length. (c) Explain why this proof would not work for a general parallelogram.
Write your working in your book.
Q8
The 6-8-10 triangle
+15 XP
Q8
SHORT ANSWER
Two triangles have sides $a = 6$ cm, $b = 8$ cm, $c = 10$ cm and sides $d = 6$ cm, $e = 8$ cm with included angle $90°$. (a) Identify the congruence test that applies, if any. (b) Calculate the third side of the second triangle to verify. (c) A student claims SSA always works for right triangles. Is this true? Explain. (d) In what way does RHS differ from the general SSA case?
Write your working in your book.
S
Stretch Challenge · Overlapping triangles
+20 XP
S
STRETCH
In the figure, $ABCD$ is a square. $P$ is a point on $AB$ and $Q$ is a point on $AD$ such that $BP = DQ$. The lines $CP$ and $CQ$ are drawn. (a) Prove that $\triangle CBP \equiv \triangle CDQ$. (b) Hence prove that $\triangle CPQ$ is isosceles. (c) If $\angle BCP = 25°$, find $\angle PCQ$.
Record in your book -- full marks require clear working.
Reveal solution

(a) In triangles $CBP$ and $CDQ$: $CB = CD$ (sides of square), $\angle CBP = \angle CDQ = 90°$ (angles of square), $BP = DQ$ (given). Therefore $\triangle CBP \equiv \triangle CDQ$ (SAS).

(b) From congruence, $CP = CQ$ (corresponding sides). Therefore $\triangle CPQ$ is isosceles with $CP = CQ$.

(c) From congruence, $\angle DCQ = \angle BCP = 25°$. Since $\angle BCD = 90°$, we have $\angle PCQ = 90° - 25° - 25° = 40°.

R
Quick Review

SSS

Three sides equal -- rigid frame

SAS

Two sides, included angle -- hinge

AAS

Two angles, side -- shape + size

RHS

Right, hypotenuse, side -- special case

SSA fails

Ambiguous case -- two triangles possible

CPCTC

Congruent $\Rightarrow$ all parts match

Interactive: Congruence Matcher

Test your knowledge by identifying which congruence test applies to each pair of triangles. Try to decide before the interactive reveals the answer.

Consolidation Game -- Doodle Jump Quiz
+10 XP for playing

Jump your way to the top by answering questions on triangle congruence, the four tests, and formal proofs. The higher you climb, the harder the questions.

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