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Transforming Shapes — Practice Geometry Questions

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2016-03-26 07:10:05
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Geometry Essentials For Dummies
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When you transform geometric shapes, you may be changing their size, location, appearance, or all three. The following practice questions ask you to perform transformations that include reflection, rotation, translation, and dilation.

Practice questions

In a composition of transformations, two or more transformations are combined to form a new transformation. Find P, the image of P (5, 1) after a composition of transformations.

  1. image0.png
  2. image1.png

Answers and explanations

  1. (1, 5)

    When doing the composition of transformations, you perform the transformation closest to the point first. Therefore, you perform the transformations from right to left.

    In this question, you rotate Point P 90 degrees counterclockwise first. Rotating 90 degrees counterclockwise about the origin is the same as reflecting over the line y = x and then reflecting over the y-axis. This means that the point (x, y) becomes the point (–y, x):

    image2.png

    After completing the rotation, you reflect the point over the y-axis. Reflecting over the y-axis negates the x coordinate:

    image3.png
  2. (1, 12)

    First dilate Point P by a scale factor of 2. A dilation by a scale factor of 2 multiplies the x and y coordinates by 2:

    image4.png

    Next, you perform the translation. T2,–3 follows the rule (x + 2, y – 3):

    image5.png

    Last, rotate the point 90 degrees counterclockwise. Rotating 90 degrees counterclockwise about the origin is the same as reflecting over the line y = x and then reflecting over the y-axis. This means that the point (x, y) becomes the point (–y, x):

    image6.png

About This Article

This article is from the book: 

About the book author:

Allen Ma is a math teacher at John F. Kennedy High School in Bellmore, NY. Allen has taught geometry for more than 25 years, has coached the math team, and is a former honors math research coordinator.

Amber Kuang is a math teacher at John F. Kennedy High School in Bellmore, NY. Amber has taught all levels of math, from algebra to calculus, for 20 years.