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Players take it in turns to choose a dot on the grid. The winner is the first to have four dots that can be joined to form a rhombus.
Players take it in turns to choose a dot on the grid. The winner is the first to have four dots that can be joined to form a parallelogram.
Take an equilateral triangle and cut it into smaller pieces. What can you do with them?
We started drawing some quadrilaterals - can you complete them?
How many questions do you need to identify my quadrilateral?
What's special about the area of quadrilaterals drawn in a square?
Can you recreate squares and rhombuses if you are only given a side or a diagonal?
Explore when it is possible to construct a circle which just touches all four sides of a quadrilateral.
The diagonals of a trapezium divide it into four parts. Can you create a trapezium where three of those parts are equal in area?
Can you find the area of a parallelogram defined by two vectors?
A game in which players take it in turns to try to draw quadrilaterals (or triangles) with particular properties. Is it possible to fill the game grid?
A game in which players take it in turns to turn up two cards. If they can draw a triangle which satisfies both properties they win the pair of cards. And a few challenging questions to follow...
A game for 2 or more people, based on the traditional card game Rummy.
Players take it in turns to choose a dot on the grid. The winner is the first to have four dots that can be joined to form a square.
Join the midpoints of a quadrilateral to get a new quadrilateral. What is special about it?
Four rods are hinged at their ends to form a convex quadrilateral. Investigate the different shapes that the quadrilateral can take. Be patient this problem may be slow to load.
Which of these quadrilaterals can you find in the hexagon?
Start with a triangle. Can you cut it up to make a rectangle?
Explore the shape of a square after it is transformed by the action of a matrix.
Investigate the properties of quadrilaterals which can be drawn with a circle just touching each side and another circle just touching each vertex.
This gives a short summary of the properties and theorems of cyclic quadrilaterals and links to some practical examples to be found elsewhere on the site.
How many differently shaped rectangles can you build using these equilateral and isosceles triangles? Can you make a square?
A picture is made by joining five small quadrilaterals together to make a large quadrilateral. Is it possible to draw a similar picture if all the small quadrilaterals are cyclic?
Four rods, two of length a and two of length b, are linked to form a kite. The linkage is moveable so that the angles change. What is the maximum area of the kite?
The points P, Q, R and S are the midpoints of the edges of a non-convex quadrilateral.What do you notice about the quadrilateral PQRS and its area?
A farmer has a field which is the shape of a trapezium as illustrated below. To increase his profits he wishes to grow two different crops. To do this he would like to divide the field into two trapeziums each of equal area. How could he do this?
What can you say about the lengths of the sides of a quadrilateral whose vertices are on a unit circle?
A kite shaped lawn consists of an equilateral triangle ABC of side 130 feet and an isosceles triangle BCD in which BD and CD are of length 169 feet. A gardener has a motor mower which cuts strips of grass exactly one foot wide and wishes to cut the entire lawn in parallel strips. What is the minimum number of strips the gardener must mow?