Transitive Property of Congruence

Malcolm McKinsey
Written by
Malcolm McKinsey
Fact-checked by
Paul Mazzola

What is the transitive property of congruence?

The transitive property of congruence states that two objects that are congruent to a third object are also congruent to each other.

If giraffes have tall necks, and Melman from the movie Madagascar is a giraffe, then Melman has a long neck. This is the transitive property at work: if a=b and b=c, then a=c. In geometry we can apply the transitive property to similarity and congruence.

Transitive Property of Congruence Example
Transitive Property of Congruence Example

Another way to think of it is that if one thing is like a second thing, and the second thing is like a third thing, then the first thing is like the third thing:

  • A=BA=B

  • A=CA=C

  • A=C\therefore A=C

The three little dots (), are a mathematical shorthand for "therefore;" since A is like B, and B is like Ctherefore A is like C.

You use this property a lot in algebra when solving for variables. If you have two expressions with the same term in each, you can use the transitive property of congruence to connect other terms in the expressions:

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Similar and congruent

Objects are similar to each other if they have the same shape but are different in size. We say that a six-year-old boy is similar to a 18-year-old adult man. Triangles can be similar.

Objects are congruent if they are the same shape and size. Two equilateral triangles with sides 2 meters long are congruent, since their angles and sides are all the same.

Transitive Property of Congruence vs. Similar
Transitive Property of Congruence vs. Similar

Congruent triangles definition

In geometry, triangles can be similar and they can be congruent. Similar triangles are proportional to each other and have the same interior angles. The only difference is the length of their sides.

Proving triangles congruent

For two similar equilateral triangles, all interior angles will be 60°. Say a small triangle has a side 3 meters, while a larger, similar triangle has a side 15 meters. Because the two triangles are similar, we know the sides of the larger triangle are 5 times larger than the small one.

Transitive Property of Congruence Triangle Similarity
Transitive Property of Congruence Triangle Similarity

Suppose we have two right triangles and want to see if they are similar. The sides of the small one are 3, 4, and 5 cm long. The corresponding hypotenuse of the larger triangle is 20 cm long.

Compare the ratios of the two hypotenuses:

Which simplifies to:

Transitive Property of Congruence - Similar Triangle Ratio
Transitive Property of Congruence - Similar Triangle Ratio

If the other sides have the same proportion, the two right triangles are similar. Measure and see:

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All three ratios have the same proportion, 1:4, so the two triangles are similar.

Transitive property of congruent triangles

Just as you used the transitive property of congruence to relate terms in algebraic expressions, you can also use the transitive property of congruence to connect similar triangles.

Draw a triangle, △CAT. Draw a triangle similar to △CAT and call it △DOG. Now draw a triangle labeled △ELK that is similar to △DOG.

Transitive Property of Congruence - Triangle Examples
Transitive Property of Congruence - Triangle Examples

What do you know about the relationship between △CAT and △ELK? If △CAT is similar to △DOG, and △DOG is similar to △ELK, then △CAT and △ELK are similar to each other.

In mathematics, a special symbol is used to show similarity: ~. So we can write the entire similarity and congruence in mathematical notation:

Transitive Property of Congruence - Congruent Triangles
Transitive Property of Congruence - Congruent Triangles

Transitive property of congruence examples

Knowing that for any objects, geometric or real, Z~A and A~P tells us that Z~P. But how can we use that information?

For triangles, all the interior angles of similar triangles are congruent, because similar triangles have the same shape but different lengths of sides.

Let's make △Z△A, and △P.

Transitive Property of Congruence - Interior Angles
Transitive Property of Congruence - Interior Angles

If △Z has an angle opposite the shortest side of 37°△A also has an angle opposite its shortest side of 37° because we said △Z~△A.

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We also know that △P has the same 37° in the same position because it is similar to △A. We also know that △Z~△P!

Lesson summary

By watching the video and reading the lesson, you now are able to explain the difference between congruent and similar, and define the transitive property of congruence, which states that two objects that are congruent to a third object, they are congruent to each other.

You can also explain what similar triangles are, and use the transitive property to prove that size is the only difference between similar triangles.


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