All Advanced Geometry Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #1 : How To Find The Area Of A Kite
Which of the following shapes is a kite?
A kite is a four-sided shape with straight sides that has two pairs of sides. Each pair of adjacent sides are equal in length. A square is also considered a kite.
Example Question #11 : Geometry
What is the area of the following kite?
The formula for the area of a kite:
,
where represents the length of one diagonal and represents the length of the other diagonal.
Plugging in our values, we get:
Example Question #1 : How To Find The Area Of A Kite
Two congruent equilateral triangles with sides of length are connected so that they share a side. Each triangle has a height of . Express the area of the shape in terms of .
The shape being described is a rhombus with side lengths 1. Since they are equilateral triangles connected by one side, that side becomes the lesser diagonal, so .
The greater diagonal is twice the height of the equaliteral triangles, .
The area of a rhombus is half the product of the diagonals, so:
Example Question #2 : How To Find The Area Of A Kite
Find the area of a kite if the diagonal dimensions are and .
The area of the kite is given below. The FOIL method will need to be used to simplify the binomial.
Example Question #1 : How To Find The Area Of A Kite
The diagonal lengths of a kite are and . What is the area?
The area of a kite is given below. Substitute the given diagonals to find the area.
Example Question #2 : How To Find The Area Of A Kite
Find the area of a kite if the length of the diagonals are and .
Substitute the given diagonals into the area formula for kites. Solve and simplify.
Example Question #3 : How To Find The Area Of A Kite
The diagonals of a kite are and . Find the area.
The formula for the area for a kite is
, where and are the lengths of the kite's two diagonals. We are given the length of these diagonals in the problem, so we can substitute them into the formula and solve for the area:
Example Question #4 : How To Find The Area Of A Kite
The diagonals of a kite are and . Express the kite's area in simplified form.
Write the formula for the area of a kite.
Substitute the diagonals and reduce.
Multiply the parenthetical elements together by distributing the :
You can consider the outermost fraction with in the denominator as multiplying everything in the numerator by :
Change the added to to create a common denominator and add the fractions to arrive at the correct answer:
Example Question #31 : Kites
If the diagonals of a kite are and , express the area in simplified form.
Write the formula for the area of a kite:
Substitute the given diagonals:
Distribute the :
Create a common denominator for the two fractions in the numerator:
You can consider the outermost division by as multiplying everything in the numerator by :
Multiply across to arrive at the correct answer:
Example Question #1 : How To Find The Area Of A Kite
Find the area of a kite if one diagonal is long, and the other diagonal is long.
The formula for the area of a kite is
Plug in the values for each of the diagonals and solve.