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Points, Lines, Planes & Angles Practice Quiz with a Step-by-Step Interactive Lesson
Use the quiz at the top of the page to practice points, lines, planes, and angles — the core building blocks of geometry and 3D geometry. You’ll review points, lines, line segments, rays, and planes; how geometry objects intersect (like line–plane intersection and plane–plane intersection); how to identify parallel, perpendicular, and skew lines; and how to solve angle questions using complementary angles, supplementary angles, vertical angles, and adjacent angles. You’ll also see essential 3D ideas like the dihedral angle between planes and quick coordinate tools (like direction vectors, normal vectors, and vector projection onto a plane). If you want a refresher, click Start lesson to open a step-by-step guide with examples and quick checks.
How this geometry practice works
- 1. Take the quiz: answer the points, lines, planes, and angles questions at the top of the page.
- 2. Open the lesson (optional): review geometry definitions, angle relationships, and 3D intersections with worked examples.
- 3. Retry: return to the quiz and apply the geometry rules immediately.
What you’ll learn in the points, lines, planes & angles lesson
Points, lines, segments & rays
- Point, line, line segment, and ray (what they mean and how to read notation)
- Collinear points, distance on a line, and counting segments between points
- Common facts: two points determine a unique line, and a segment can be divided into a ratio
Planes & intersections in 3D geometry
- Planes and coplanar points
- How many points determine a plane: three non-collinear points determine one plane
- Intersections: line–plane intersection (often a point) and plane–plane intersection (a line)
Angles & angle relationships
- Angle types: acute, right, obtuse, straight, reflex, and full rotation
- Complementary and supplementary angles, plus adjacent and vertical angles
- Parallel and perpendicular lines and the angle facts they create
Skew lines, dihedral angles & vectors
- Skew lines (non-parallel, non-intersecting lines in 3D) and how their angle is defined
- Dihedral angle between planes and what it means for planes to be perpendicular
- Coordinate tools: dot product for angles and projection of a vector onto a plane
Back to the quiz
When you’re ready, return to the quiz at the top of the page and keep practicing points, lines, planes, and angles.
