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A conjecture and the paragraph proof used to prove the conjecture are shown.

Drag an expression or phrase to each box to complete the proof.

A conjecture and the paragraph proof used to prove the conjecture are shown. Drag-example-1
A conjecture and the paragraph proof used to prove the conjecture are shown. Drag-example-1
A conjecture and the paragraph proof used to prove the conjecture are shown. Drag-example-2
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User Dymv
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2 Answers

4 votes

here you go! hope this helps you, have a nice day.

A conjecture and the paragraph proof used to prove the conjecture are shown. Drag-example-1
answered
User Genesis
by
8.6k points
4 votes

Angle 2 is equal to angle 3, by definition of angle bisector. In fact, a line is an angle bisector if it cuts the angle in two equal angles, which in this case are 2 and 3.

Finally, we can state that angles 1 and 3 are the same by the transitive property of congruence, because we prooved that angle 1 equals angle 2 and angle 2 equals angle 3, so we can conclude that angle 1 equals angle 3.

answered
User Rylab
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