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Properties of 2D Shapes

Identifying and describing triangles, quadrilaterals, polygons and circles and their properties.

1

What is Properties of 2D Shapes?

In the 11+ exam, you need to know the names and properties of common 2D shapes, including the number of sides, angles, lines of symmetry, and whether sides are equal or parallel.

Key shape families include triangles (equilateral, isosceles, scalene, right-angled), quadrilaterals (square, rectangle, parallelogram, rhombus, trapezium, kite), and regular polygons.

2

Step-by-Step Method

1

Count the sides

Triangle = 3, quadrilateral = 4, pentagon = 5, hexagon = 6, heptagon = 7, octagon = 8.

2

Check for equal sides

Are all sides equal (regular)? Are some sides equal? Mark equal sides on your diagram.

3

Check for parallel sides

Parallel sides are marked with arrows. A parallelogram has 2 pairs, a trapezium has 1 pair.

4

Check the angles

Are there right angles? Are any angles equal? Use the angle sum rules to check.

5

Count lines of symmetry

A line of symmetry divides the shape into two identical halves. Fold the shape mentally along the line.

3

Worked Examples

Example 1 – Identify from Properties

A shape has 4 sides, all sides equal, and no right angles. What is it?

Working

  1. 4 sides = quadrilateral.
  2. All sides equal = could be square or rhombus.
  3. No right angles = not a square.
Answer: Rhombus
Example 2 – Lines of Symmetry

How many lines of symmetry does a regular hexagon have?

Working

  1. A regular hexagon has 6 equal sides and 6 equal angles.
  2. Regular polygons have the same number of lines of symmetry as they have sides.
Answer: 6 lines of symmetry
Example 3 – Quadrilateral Identification

Name the quadrilateral with exactly one pair of parallel sides.

Working

  1. Square: 2 pairs. Rectangle: 2 pairs. Parallelogram: 2 pairs. Rhombus: 2 pairs.
  2. Kite: 0 pairs.
  3. Trapezium: exactly 1 pair.
Answer: Trapezium
4

Common Mistakes

Common error

Forgetting that a square is also a rectangle, a rhombus and a parallelogram.

Correct approach

A square is a special case of all three. It has all their properties plus right angles and equal sides.

Common error

Confusing a rhombus with a diamond shape that is not a quadrilateral.

Correct approach

A rhombus is a quadrilateral with 4 equal sides. Think of it as a “squashed square”.

Common error

Thinking regular means “has right angles”.

Correct approach

Regular means all sides equal AND all angles equal. A regular pentagon has no right angles.

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Top Tips

  • Learn the triangle types: equilateral (all equal), isosceles (two equal), scalene (none equal), right-angled (one 90-degree angle).
  • A regular polygon with n sides has n lines of symmetry and rotational symmetry of order n.
  • Parallel lines are marked with arrows on diagrams. Equal sides are marked with small dashes.
  • Remember the quadrilateral hierarchy: square is a special rectangle, which is a special parallelogram.

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