This printable crossword puzzle on the topic of Geometry has 29 clues. Answers range from 3 to 18 letters long. This crossword is also available to download as a Microsoft Word document or a PDF.
An angle whose measure is less than 90 degrees.
An angle whose measure is 90 degrees.
An angle whose measure is greater than 90 degrees but less than 180 degrees.
An angle whose measure is 180 degrees.
Coplanar angles that have a common side, common vertex, and no common interior points.
A line, ray or segment that cuts an angle into two equal angles.
Points that lie on the same line.
Points that lie in the same plane.
Two angles whose sum is equal to 90 degrees.
Angles that have equal measure.
Segments that have equal lengths.
A drawing that shows a corner view of a 3-D figure that allows you to see the top, front and side of an object in the same drawing.
A pair of adjacent angles whose non-common sides form a line.
A point on a line segment that divides the segment in to equal lengths.
A ________________ bisector is a line ray or segment that is perpendicular to the segment at its midpoint.
Lines that intersect and form right angles.
A statement in geometry that is accepted as fact without proof.
Part of a line that consists of one endpoint and all points of the line on one side of the endpoint.
Two rays that share the same endpoint and form a line.
Part of a line that contains two endpoints and all points between them.
A line, ray or segment that which cuts another line segment into equal parts.
Two angles whose sum is equal to a straight angle or 180 degrees.
A pair of angles whose sides form two pairs of opposite rays.
A statement that is written in if-then form.
The part of a conditional statement that follows the if.
The part of a conditional statement that follows the then.
A statement in geometry that is accepted as fact only after it has been proven.
____________ reasoning is a process of reasoning logically from given facts to reach a conclusion.
______________reasoning is a type of reasoning that reaches a conclusion based on a pattern of specific examples or past events to reach a conclusion.