ShmoopTube
Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.
Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos
Appropriate Units and Scales Videos 17 videos
GED Math 2.4 Rational Numbers. Lucius's favorite restaurant is how many km from his home?
CAHSEE Math 5.3 Measurement and Geometry 283 Views
Share It!
Description:
Measurement and Geometry: Drill Set 5, Problem 3. Which of the following figures shown on the same coordinate axis would be the resulting triangle?
Transcript
- 00:03
Here’s your shmoop du jour…
- 00:06
Jake’s favorite way to mess with his roommate Blake is to continually move his stuff around.
- 00:10
Like… Blake’s unusual collection of signed… triangles.The triangle XYZ is shown below.
- 00:16
If this triangle is translated +2 units on the x-axis and -2 units on the y-axis,
- 00:22
the resulting triangle X'Y'Z' would be which of the following figures shown on the same coordinate axis?
Full Transcript
- 00:31
And here are the potential answers...
- 00:37
OK, so this question is asking us about translation.
- 00:40
A translation of 2 on the x-axis, the horizontal axis, moves the whole triangle to the right 2 units.
- 00:47
Similarly, a translation of negative 2 on
- 00:50
the y-axis, the vertical axis, means a shift of 2 units down for the entire triangle.
- 00:56
Since both translations move the entire triangle, this also means that any point on the triangle
- 01:01
XYZ undergoes the same translation.
- 01:04
We can focus on just one point of the triangle, like X, on the triangle XYZ.
- 01:09
It has coordinates (-4, 4).
- 01:12
Undergoing the translation of 2 to the right and 2 down, the new point, X', should have
- 01:16
coordinates (-4 + 2, 4 - 2) or (-2, 2).
- 01:22
The only triangle with X' having these coordinates is triangle D.
- 01:25
Our answer is D.
- 01:29
As in, "Don't touch my things!”
Related Videos
CAHSEE Math: Algebra and Functions Drill 5, Problem 3. Solve the equation.
The video will show you how to plot points in 3D using the axes of the 3D coordinate system. Make sure you're wearing your special glasses for this...
When graphing inequalities, you graph the line, shade the corresponding side, and plug in the point. The end!
One formula to rule them all, one formula to find them. One formula to bring them all, and in the darkness bind them. Or something like that. I...