So....I need either an angle or a side.

Wormman12

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Jan 27, 2013
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I'm starting to get the hang of these, but this one has a bit of a confusion to it. from what I got from it, I figured this out:


Since M is the midpoint for line AC; Line AM is cong w/Line MC.
line BM perpendicualr to Line AC; ∠AMB≈∠CMB (both being right angles).

The next step, I want to say that line BM bisects B so I can have an ASA theorem to complete it, but that isn't given. I know that if we consider tat line AC is a transversal between lines BC and BA they are supplementary, but that doesn't mean they are congruent, so I am stumped.View attachment Mathmatical problem2.pdf
 
I'm starting to get the hang of these, but this one has a bit of a confusion to it. from what I got from it, I figured this out:


Since M is the midpoint for line AC; Line AM is cong w/Line MC.
line BM perpendicualr to Line AC; ∠AMB≈∠CMB (both being right angles).

The next step, I want to say that line BM bisects B so I can have an ASA theorem to complete it, but that isn't given. I know that if we consider tat line AC is a transversal between lines BC and BA they are supplementary, but that doesn't mean they are congruent, so I am stumped.View attachment 2568

Do you see that BM is a side of EACH of the triangles you are trying to prove congruent?

BM = BM by the reflexive property of equality. (or, you could say that BM is congruent to BM by the reflexive property of congruence.)

Either way, your two triangles are congruent by SAS.
 
Okay, so....whenever two angles use the same side, that side is considered congruent?
 
Okay, so....whenever two angles use the same side, that side is considered congruent?

If the same segment is a side of each of the two angles, then yes, that segment is surely congruent to itself. The reflexive property of congruence says that any segment is congruent to itself.
 
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