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Geometry Final Exam

A free Geometry lesson from the “Probability” unit, with a worked example and practice problems including step-by-step solutions.

The final exam is a cumulative Geometry assessment across diagrams, angles, triangles, similarity, trigonometry, measurement, circles, solids, transformations, coordinate proof, formal proof, and geometric probability. In Probability, students need to read the diagram, name the relationship, choose a theorem or formula, and justify why the result follows. The expanded practice now includes fluency, transfer, cumulative review, and proof-style reasoning so Geometry feels connected instead of isolated by topic.

What you'll learn

Why it matters: Geometry assessments mix diagram reading, formulas, coordinates, proof logic, and context so students practice choosing evidence rather than memorizing a single cue.

Worked example

Problem. Worked example from Geometry Vocabulary and Diagrams: Which object extends forever in both directions?

  1. Warm-up: First identify exactly what the question is asking: Which object extends forever in both directions?
  2. Compare each answer choice with the calculation or rule, and eliminate choices that do not satisfy the condition.
  3. A line has no endpoints.
  4. Verify the selected choice by checking that it satisfies the original prompt and that the other choices fail the same test.

Answer: Line

Practice problems

1. Geometry Final Exam review case A from Geometry Vocabulary and Diagrams: Which object extends forever in both directions?

Choices: Line · Segment · Ray · Point

Show solution
  1. Warm-up: First identify exactly what the question is asking: Which object extends forever in both directions?
  2. Compare each answer choice with the calculation or rule, and eliminate choices that do not satisfy the condition.
  3. A line has no endpoints.
  4. Verify the selected choice by checking that it satisfies the original prompt and that the other choices fail the same test.
  5. Identify the diagram relationship, formula, theorem, or proof reason before calculating.

Answer: Line

2. Geometry Final Exam review case B from Geometry Vocabulary and Diagrams: Which object has two endpoints?

Choices: Segment · Line · Plane · Ray

Show solution
  1. Warm-up: First identify exactly what the question is asking: Which object has two endpoints?
  2. Compare each answer choice with the calculation or rule, and eliminate choices that do not satisfy the condition.
  3. A segment is finite.
  4. Verify the selected choice by checking that it satisfies the original prompt and that the other choices fail the same test.
  5. Identify the diagram relationship, formula, theorem, or proof reason before calculating.

Answer: Segment

3. Geometry Final Exam review case C from Geometry Vocabulary and Diagrams: A ray has...

Choices: One endpoint · Two endpoints · No endpoints · Only area

Show solution
  1. Core Practice: First identify exactly what the question is asking: A ray has...
  2. Compare each answer choice with the calculation or rule, and eliminate choices that do not satisfy the condition.
  3. A ray starts at one point and extends in one direction.
  4. Verify the selected choice by checking that it satisfies the original prompt and that the other choices fail the same test.
  5. Identify the diagram relationship, formula, theorem, or proof reason before calculating.

Answer: One endpoint

4. Geometry Final Exam review case D from Geometry Vocabulary and Diagrams: How many degrees are in a right angle?

Show solution
  1. Core Practice: First identify exactly what the question is asking: How many degrees are in a right angle?
  2. Use the relevant geometric relationship first, then set up an equation from the angle measures or side relationships.
  3. A right angle measures 90 degrees.
  4. Check the result by substituting or estimating: the response should match 90 and make sense in the original problem.
  5. Identify the diagram relationship, formula, theorem, or proof reason before calculating.

Answer: 90

5. Geometry Final Exam review case E from Geometry Vocabulary and Diagrams: Two lines in the same plane that never meet are...

Choices: Parallel · Perpendicular · Congruent · Collinear

Show solution
  1. Core Practice: First identify exactly what the question is asking: Two lines in the same plane that never meet are...
  2. Compare each answer choice with the calculation or rule, and eliminate choices that do not satisfy the condition.
  3. Parallel lines do not intersect.
  4. Verify the selected choice by checking that it satisfies the original prompt and that the other choices fail the same test.
  5. Identify the diagram relationship, formula, theorem, or proof reason before calculating.

Answer: Parallel

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