Friday, December 12, 2025

Class 6 Mathematics - Chapter 8: Playing with Constructions

Class 6 Mathematics - Chapter 8: Playing with Constructions

Class 6 Mathematics – NCERT (Ganita Prakash)

Chapter 8: PLAYING WITH CONSTRUCTIONS - Complete Question Bank

A. Multiple Choice Questions (20 Questions)

1. In a rectangle, how many pairs of opposite sides are equal?
a) 1
b) 2
c) 3
d) 4
Answer: b) 2
A rectangle has two pairs of opposite sides: the two lengths and the two breadths.
(Logical Reasoning, Spatial Understanding)
2. If all sides of a quadrilateral are equal and all angles are 90°, it is a:
a) Rectangle
b) Rhombus
c) Square
d) Parallelogram
Answer: c) Square
A square is defined by exactly these two properties: all sides equal and all angles 90°.
(Conceptual Understanding)
3. How many right angles does a square have?
a) 1
b) 2
c) 3
d) 4
Answer: d) 4
By definition, every angle in a square is a right angle (90°).
(Factual Recall)
4. Which of the following is NOT a valid name for a rectangle with vertices A, B, C, D?
a) ABCD
b) BCDA
c) ACBD
d) CDAB
Answer: c) ACBD
Vertices must be named in order around the shape. ACBD jumps from A to C (a diagonal).
(Spatial Understanding)
5. Which property is true for both squares and rectangles?
a) All sides equal
b) Diagonals equal
c) All angles 90°
d) Opposite sides parallel
Answer: c) All angles 90°
Both have four right angles. Only squares have all sides equal.
(Analytical Thinking)
6. If a diagonal of a rectangle divides an angle into 60° and 30°, the other angles are:
a) 60° and 30°
b) 90° each
c) 120° and 60°
d) 45° each
Answer: a) 60° and 30°
Diagonals create equal angles at opposite vertices.
(Logical Reasoning)
7. To construct a square of side 5 cm, which step comes first?
a) Draw a perpendicular
b) Draw a line of 5 cm
c) Draw a diagonal
d) Draw a circle
Answer: b) Draw a line of 5 cm
First draw one side as the base.
(Procedural Understanding)
8. A rectangle with sides 4 cm and 6 cm has a perimeter of:
a) 10 cm
b) 20 cm
c) 24 cm
d) 30 cm
Answer: b) 20 cm
Perimeter = 2 × (4 + 6) = 20 cm.
(Numerical Application)
9. Which shape can be divided into two identical squares?
a) Any rectangle
b) Rectangle with sides in ratio 1:2
c) Rectangle with sides in ratio 2:3
d) Only a square
Answer: b) Rectangle with sides in ratio 1:2
Length must be exactly twice the breadth.
(Analytical Thinking)
10. How many arcs are drawn to locate a point equidistant from two given points?
a) 1
b) 2
c) 3
d) 4
Answer: b) 2
One arc from each point with the same radius.
(Procedural Understanding)
11. In a square, each diagonal divides the opposite angles into:
a) Two equal parts
b) Unequal parts
c) 60° and 30°
d) 90° each
Answer: a) Two equal parts
Diagonals of a square bisect the angles (45° each).
(Conceptual Understanding)
12. If AB = 8 cm in a rectangle, then CD =
a) 4 cm
b) 8 cm
c) 12 cm
d) 16 cm
Answer: b) 8 cm
Opposite sides are equal in a rectangle.
(Logical Reasoning)
13. A rotated square is still a square because:
a) Sides change
b) Angles change
c) Both sides and angles remain same
d) It becomes a rectangle
Answer: c) Both sides and angles remain same
Rotation doesn't change dimensions or angles.
(Spatial Understanding)
14. Which instrument is essential for constructing a "House" figure with arcs?
a) Protractor
b) Compass
c) Set-square
d) Divider
Answer: b) Compass
The arcs in the house construction require a compass.
(Tool Knowledge)
15. A rectangle with one side 5 cm and diagonal 7 cm will have the other side approximately:
a) 4.9 cm
b) 5 cm
c) 6 cm
d) 8.6 cm
Answer: a) 4.9 cm
Using Pythagoras: √(7² - 5²) = √24 ≈ 4.9 cm.
(Numerical Application)
16. The number of diagonals in a rectangle is:
a) 1
b) 2
c) 3
d) 4
Answer: b) 2
Every quadrilateral has 2 diagonals.
(Factual Recall)
17. What is the main use of a compass in geometric constructions?
a) To measure angles
b) To draw arcs and transfer lengths
c) To draw straight lines
d) To measure curves
Answer: b) To draw arcs and transfer lengths
Compass is primarily for arcs and transferring equal distances.
(Tool Knowledge)
18. In the "Wavy Wave" pattern, if the central line is 8 cm, what is the radius for half-circle waves?
a) 2 cm
b) 4 cm
c) 8 cm
d) 16 cm
Answer: b) 4 cm
For half-circle waves, radius = half of central line segment = 4 cm.
(Application)
19. When constructing a rectangle given one side and diagonal, we use:
a) Only perpendicular lines
b) Arcs from compass
c) Only parallel lines
d) Angle bisectors
Answer: b) Arcs from compass
We draw an arc with diagonal as radius to locate the third vertex.
(Procedural Understanding)
20. What do we call lines drawn lightly to guide construction?
a) Final lines
b) Construction lines
c) Border lines
d) Measurement lines
Answer: b) Construction lines
These are temporary guiding lines erased later.
(Terminology)

B. Assertion & Reasoning (20 Questions)

1. Assertion (A): All squares are rectangles.
Reason (R): A square has all angles 90° and opposite sides equal.
a) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A.
b) Both A and R are true, but R is not the correct explanation of A.
c) A is true, but R is false.
d) A is false, but R is true.
Answer: a) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A.
A square satisfies both properties of a rectangle (all angles 90°, opposite sides equal).
(Logical Reasoning, Analytical Thinking)
2. Assertion (A): A rotated square remains a square.
Reason (R): Rotation changes the side lengths.
a) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A.
b) Both A and R are true, but R is not the correct explanation of A.
c) A is true, but R is false.
d) A is false, but R is true.
Answer: c) A is true, but R is false.
Rotation preserves side lengths and angles.
(Spatial Understanding)
3. Assertion (A): Diagonals of a rectangle are equal.
Reason (R): Diagonals of a square are not equal.
a) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A.
b) Both A and R are true, but R is not the correct explanation of A.
c) A is true, but R is false.
d) A is false, but R is true.
Answer: c) A is true, but R is false.
Square diagonals are also equal.
(Conceptual Understanding)
4. Assertion (A): A rectangle can be named in 8 different ways.
Reason (R): The vertices can be taken in any order.
a) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A.
b) Both A and R are true, but R is not the correct explanation of A.
c) A is true, but R is false.
d) A is false, but R is true.
Answer: c) A is true, but R is false.
Vertices must be in cyclic order, not any order.
(Analytical Thinking)
5. Assertion (A): To find a point equidistant from two points, we draw two arcs.
Reason (R): The intersection of arcs gives points at equal distance from both centers.
a) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A.
b) Both A and R are true, but R is not the correct explanation of A.
c) A is true, but R is false.
d) A is false, but R is true.
Answer: a) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A.
The construction method follows from the geometric principle stated in R.
(Procedural Understanding)
6. Assertion (A): A square can be divided into two identical rectangles.
Reason (R): A square has all sides equal.
a) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A.
b) Both A and R are true, but R is not the correct explanation of A.
c) A is true, but R is false.
d) A is false, but R is true.
Answer: b) Both A and R are true, but R is not the correct explanation of A.
Both true, but division into rectangles is due to symmetry, not just equal sides.
(Analytical Thinking)
7. Assertion (A): In a rectangle, if one diagonal divides an angle into 45° and 45°, the rectangle is a square.
Reason (R): In a square, diagonals bisect the angles equally.
a) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A.
b) Both A and R are true, but R is not the correct explanation of A.
c) A is true, but R is false.
d) A is false, but R is true.
Answer: a) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A.
If diagonal bisects 90° into 45°, adjacent sides must be equal, making it a square.
(Logical Reasoning)
8. Assertion (A): Using a compass, we can transfer lengths without a ruler.
Reason (R): A compass can measure angles.
a) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A.
b) Both A and R are true, but R is not the correct explanation of A.
c) A is true, but R is false.
d) A is false, but R is true.
Answer: c) A is true, but R is false.
Compass transfers lengths, not measures angles.
(Tool Knowledge)
9. Assertion (A): A rectangle with sides 3 cm and 4 cm has a diagonal of 5 cm.
Reason (R): For a rectangle, diagonal = √(length² + breadth²).
a) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A.
b) Both A and R are true, but R is not the correct explanation of A.
c) A is true, but R is false.
d) A is false, but R is true.
Answer: a) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A.
√(3² + 4²) = √(9+16) = √25 = 5 cm.
(Numerical Application)
10. Assertion (A): In the "House" construction, point A is found using two arcs.
Reason (R): Point A is 5 cm from both B and C.
a) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A.
b) Both A and R are true, but R is not the correct explanation of A.
c) A is true, but R is false.
d) A is false, but R is true.
Answer: a) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A.
Because A is 5 cm from both B and C, we use arcs of radius 5 cm from both points.
(Application)
11. Assertion (A): A quadrilateral with all sides equal is a square.
Reason (R): A rhombus also has all sides equal.
a) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A.
b) Both A and R are true, but R is not the correct explanation of A.
c) A is true, but R is false.
d) A is false, but R is true.
Answer: d) A is false, but R is true.
All sides equal makes it a rhombus. Need all angles 90° for square.
(Conceptual Understanding)
12. Assertion (A): A rectangle cannot be divided into 3 identical squares if sides are not in ratio 1:3.
Reason (R): For 3 identical squares, longer side must be 3 times shorter side.
a) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A.
b) Both A and R are true, but R is not the correct explanation of A.
c) A is true, but R is false.
d) A is false, but R is true.
Answer: a) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A.
The condition in R explains why A is true.
(Analytical Thinking)
13. Assertion (A): A square satisfies the following two properties: S1) All the sides are equal, and S2) All the angles are 90°.
Reason (R): These are the defining properties of a square.
a) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A.
b) Both A and R are true, but R is not the correct explanation of A.
c) A is true, but R is false.
d) A is false, but R is true.
Answer: a) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A.
R identifies these as definitional properties.
(Conceptual Understanding)
14. Assertion (A): A square of side 6 cm has a diagonal of about 8.5 cm.
Reason (R): Diagonal of a square = side × √2.
a) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A.
b) Both A and R are true, but R is not the correct explanation of A.
c) A is true, but R is false.
d) A is false, but R is true.
Answer: a) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A.
6 × √2 ≈ 6 × 1.414 = 8.484 ≈ 8.5 cm.
(Numerical Application)
15. Assertion (A): In a rectangle, diagonals bisect each other.
Reason (R): Diagonals of a rectangle are perpendicular.
a) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A.
b) Both A and R are true, but R is not the correct explanation of A.
c) A is true, but R is false.
d) A is false, but R is true.
Answer: c) A is true, but R is false.
Rectangle diagonals bisect but are perpendicular only in square.
(Conceptual Understanding)
16. Assertion (A): To construct a rectangle given one side and a diagonal, we use a compass.
Reason (R): The third vertex lies on the intersection of an arc and a perpendicular line.
a) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A.
b) Both A and R are true, but R is not the correct explanation of A.
c) A is true, but R is false.
d) A is false, but R is true.
Answer: a) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A.
The arc (from compass) with diagonal as radius helps locate the vertex.
(Procedural Understanding)
17. Assertion (A): A rotated rectangle is still a rectangle.
Reason (R): Rotation does not change lengths and angles.
a) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A.
b) Both A and R are true, but R is not the correct explanation of A.
c) A is true, but R is false.
d) A is false, but R is true.
Answer: a) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A.
Since rectangle properties depend on lengths/angles preserved by rotation.
(Spatial Understanding)
18. Assertion (A): A compass can be used to draw a circle of radius 4 cm.
Reason (R): A compass has a pencil and a pointed tip.
a) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A.
b) Both A and R are true, but R is not the correct explanation of A.
c) A is true, but R is false.
d) A is false, but R is true.
Answer: b) Both A and R are true, but R is not the correct explanation of A.
R describes structure, not how radius is set and maintained.
(Tool Knowledge)
19. Assertion (A): A rhombus with all angles 90° is a square.
Reason (R): A rhombus has all sides equal.
a) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A.
b) Both A and R are true, but R is not the correct explanation of A.
c) A is true, but R is false.
d) A is false, but R is true.
Answer: a) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A.
Rhombus (all sides equal) + all angles 90° = Square.
(Logical Reasoning)
20. Assertion (A): Construction lines are drawn lightly in geometric constructions.
Reason (R): They are temporary guides to be erased later.
a) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A.
b) Both A and R are true, but R is not the correct explanation of A.
c) A is true, but R is false.
d) A is false, but R is true.
Answer: a) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A.
Light lines are used because they are temporary, as explained in R.
(Procedural Understanding)

C. True/False (10 Questions)

1. All rectangles are squares.
Answer: False
All squares are rectangles, but not all rectangles are squares.
(Conceptual Clarity)
2. A square has 4 lines of symmetry.
Answer: True
Two diagonals and two lines through midpoints of opposite sides.
(Spatial Understanding)
3. The diagonals of a square are equal.
Answer: True
This is a key property of squares and rectangles.
(Factual Recall)
4. A quadrilateral with all angles 90° must be a square.
Answer: False
Could be a rectangle if sides are not all equal.
(Conceptual Understanding)
5. A rectangle can be constructed if only one side is known.
Answer: False
Need both adjacent sides or one side and diagonal.
(Procedural Understanding)
6. In a rectangle, opposite sides are parallel.
Answer: True
This is a fundamental property of rectangles.
(Factual Recall)
7. A rhombus is a square if one angle is 90°.
Answer: True
If one angle is 90°, all become 90° in a rhombus.
(Logical Reasoning)
8. A rotated rectangle is still a rectangle.
Answer: True
Rotation preserves lengths and angles.
(Spatial Understanding)
9. A compass can only draw full circles.
Answer: False
Can draw arcs (parts of circles).
(Tool Knowledge)
10. In a square, diagonals are perpendicular to each other.
Answer: True
Diagonals of a square intersect at right angles.
(Factual Recall)

D. Short Answer Type I (2 Marks each – 15 Questions)

1. Write two properties of a rectangle.
Answer:
1. Opposite sides are equal in length.
2. All interior angles are right angles (90°).
(Recall, Basic Application)
2. If a rectangle has length 8 cm and breadth 6 cm, what is the length of its diagonal?
Answer: 10 cm
Using Pythagoras theorem: √(8² + 6²) = √(64 + 36) = √100 = 10 cm.
(Problem-Solving, Numerical Application)
3. How many different ways can you name a rectangle with vertices W, X, Y, Z?
Answer: 8 ways
Start from any of 4 vertices and go clockwise or anti-clockwise: 4 × 2 = 8.
(Analytical Thinking)
4. How do you draw a perpendicular to a line using a compass?
Answer:
1. Mark point P on line. 2. With P as center, draw arcs cutting line at A and B. 3. With A and B as centers, draw intersecting arcs above/below line at Q. 4. Join P and Q.
(Procedural Application)
5. Write one similarity and one difference between a square and a rectangle.
Answer:
Similarity: Both have all angles 90°.
Difference: Square has all sides equal; rectangle has only opposite sides equal.
(Comparative Analysis)
6. In a rectangle ABCD, if AB = 7 cm and BC = 5 cm, what are the lengths of CD and AD?
Answer: CD = 7 cm, AD = 5 cm
Opposite sides are equal: CD opposite AB, AD opposite BC.
(Logical Reasoning)
7. What is the minimum number of measurements needed to construct a square?
Answer: 1
Only side length is needed.
(Conceptual Understanding)
8. If a diagonal of a square is 10 cm, what is the side length?
Answer: 10/√2 = 5√2 cm ≈ 7.07 cm
Diagonal = side × √2, so side = diagonal/√2.
(Numerical Application)
9. Can a rectangle be divided into two identical squares? If yes, give an example of side lengths.
Answer: Yes. Example: 4 cm × 2 cm rectangle.
Length must be exactly twice the breadth.
(Analytical Thinking)
10. What is the purpose of drawing light construction lines?
Answer:
To guide accurate construction; they are temporary and erased later.
(Procedural Understanding)
11. What is the first step in constructing a square of side 6 cm?
Answer: Draw a line segment of 6 cm.
This forms the base side of the square.
(Procedural Application)
12. How do you verify that opposite sides of a constructed rectangle are equal?
Answer:
Measure the lengths using a ruler and compare opposite sides.
(Verification Skills)
13. What happens to a square when it is rotated?
Answer: It remains a square.
Rotation doesn't change side lengths or angles.
(Spatial Understanding)
14. In the "Wavy Wave", if central line is 10 cm, what is length AX for half-circle wave?
Answer: 5 cm
X is midpoint, so AX = half of AB = 5 cm.
(Application)
15. Name the tool used to draw arcs in geometric constructions.
Answer: Compass
Compass is specifically designed for drawing arcs and circles.
(Tool Knowledge)

E. Short Answer Type II (3 Marks each – 10 Questions)

1. Construct a rectangle with sides 5 cm and 3 cm. Verify its properties.
Answer:
Steps:
1. Draw AB = 5 cm.
2. Construct perpendiculars at A and B.
3. Mark AD = 3 cm on perpendicular from A.
4. Mark BC = 3 cm on perpendicular from B.
5. Join D and C.

Verification:
• Measure opposite sides: AB = CD = 5 cm, BC = AD = 3 cm. ✔
• Measure angles: ∠A = ∠B = ∠C = ∠D = 90°. ✔
(Problem-Solving, Procedural Application, Verification)
2. Explain how to locate a point that is 4 cm from point P and 4 cm from point Q using compass.
Answer:
1. Open compass to 4 cm radius.
2. With P as center, draw an arc.
3. With Q as center, draw another arc of same radius.
4. The intersection(s) of the arcs are the required point(s) equidistant from P and Q.
(Procedural Application, Spatial Understanding)
3. Draw a square of side 4 cm without using a protractor.
Answer:
Steps (using compass and ruler):
1. Draw PQ = 4 cm.
2. At P, construct a perpendicular line.
3. With P as center, radius 4 cm, draw arc on perpendicular to mark S (PS=4cm).
4. At Q, construct a perpendicular line.
5. With Q as center, radius 4 cm, draw arc on this perpendicular to mark R (QR=4cm).
6. Join R and S.
(Procedural Application, Tool Usage)
4. Divide a rectangle of sides 9 cm and 3 cm into three identical squares.
Answer:
Steps:
1. Construct rectangle ABCD with AB = 9 cm, BC = 3 cm.
2. On AB, mark points E and F such that AE = EF = FB = 3 cm each.
3. Draw lines from E and F perpendicular to AB (parallel to BC) to meet CD.
4. This divides rectangle into three 3 cm × 3 cm squares.
(Problem-Solving, Application)
5. In a rectangle, one diagonal divides an angle into 55° and 35°. What are the other angles?
Answer: 90°, 55°, and 35°
• The full angle at that vertex is 90° (55°+35°).
• The opposite vertex also has its angle divided into 55° and 35°.
• The remaining two vertices each have 90° angles.
(Logical Reasoning, Analytical Thinking)
6. Construct a rectangle with one side 6 cm and diagonal 10 cm.
Answer:
Steps:
1. Draw base CD = 6 cm.
2. At C, draw perpendicular line `l`.
3. With D as center, radius 10 cm, draw arc cutting line `l` at B.
4. With B as center, radius 6 cm, draw arc.
5. With D as center, radius = BC (measure BC first), draw arc to intersect previous arc at A.
6. Join A to B and A to D.
(Procedural Application, Problem-Solving)
7. How will you draw the "Wavy Wave" pattern using a compass?
Answer:
Steps:
1. Draw central line AB of desired length (e.g., 8 cm).
2. Find midpoint X of AB.
3. For half-circle wave above line: With A as center, radius AX, draw semicircle from A to X.
4. For wave below line: With X as center, same radius, draw semicircle from X to B.
For smaller waves: Adjust compass radius to less than AX.
(Procedural Application, Creativity)
8. Using a compass, bisect a line segment of length 8 cm.
Answer:
Steps:
1. Draw PQ = 8 cm.
2. With P as center, radius > 4 cm, draw arcs above and below PQ.
3. With Q as center, same radius, draw arcs to intersect first arcs at R (above) and S (below).
4. Draw line RS. Intersection M with PQ is the midpoint, bisecting PQ into 4 cm each.
(Procedural Application, Tool Usage)
9. Construct a rectangle that can be divided into two identical squares.
Answer:
Steps:
1. Choose square side, e.g., 3 cm. Rectangle will be 3 cm × 6 cm.
2. Draw AB = 6 cm.
3. Construct perpendiculars at A and B.
4. Mark AD = BC = 3 cm.
5. Join D and C.
6. Find midpoint M of AB. Draw line through M parallel to AD to divide into two squares.
(Problem-Solving, Application)
10. Show steps to construct a square when its diagonal is given as 8 cm.
Answer:
Steps:
1. Draw diagonal AC = 8 cm.
2. Find midpoint O of AC.
3. At O, construct perpendicular bisector of AC.
4. On perpendicular bisector, mark points B and D such that OB = OD = 4 cm (half of diagonal).
5. Join A, B, C, D to form square.
(Note: side = diagonal/√2 = 8/√2 = 4√2 ≈ 5.66 cm)
(Problem-Solving, Procedural Application)

F. Long Answer Type (5 Marks each – 10 Questions)

1. Construct a square of side 6 cm. Measure its diagonals and verify they are equal.
Answer:
Construction Steps:
1. Draw line segment PQ = 6 cm.
2. At P, construct perpendicular line. Mark point S on it such that PS = 6 cm.
3. At Q, construct perpendicular line. Mark point R on it such that QR = 6 cm.
4. Join R and S. PQRS is the constructed square.

Verification:
• Using a ruler, measure diagonals PR and QS.
• Observation: Both diagonals measure approximately 8.5 cm (6 × √2 ≈ 8.49 cm).
• Conclusion: The diagonals are equal in length.
(Comprehensive Problem-Solving, Measurement, Verification)
2. Construct a rectangle ABCD with AB = 8 cm and BC = 5 cm. Draw its diagonals and measure the angles they make with the sides.
Answer:
Construction Steps:
1. Draw AB = 8 cm.
2. Construct perpendiculars at A and B.
3. Mark AD = 5 cm on perpendicular from A.
4. Mark BC = 5 cm on perpendicular from B.
5. Join D and C.
6. Draw diagonals AC and BD.

Measurement & Observation:
• Using protractor, measure angles like ∠CAB, ∠CAD, ∠ABD, etc.
• Diagonals are not perpendicular to sides (unlike square).
• Specific angles can be calculated: tan ΞΈ = opposite/adjacent side ratio.
(Comprehensive Construction, Measurement, Analysis)
3. Construct the "House" figure with all sides 5 cm. Show all construction arcs.
Answer:
Detailed Steps:
1. Base: Draw horizontal line BC = 5 cm.
2. Locate A (Roof Peak):
• With B as center, radius 5 cm, draw arc above BC.
• With C as center, radius 5 cm, draw another arc to intersect first arc at A.
3. Walls: Join A to B and A to C. (AB = AC = 5 cm).
4. Door: Mark point in middle of BC. Draw rectangular door (e.g., 2 cm wide).
5. Roof Arc: With A as center, radius 5 cm, draw circular arc from B to C.

Key: Show construction arcs lightly to demonstrate how points were located.
(Creative Construction, Procedural Application, Spatial Design)
4. Construct a rectangle that can be divided into two identical squares. Explain your steps.
Answer:
Explanation: For rectangle to be divisible into two squares, length must be twice breadth.

Construction Steps:
1. Plan: Choose square side, e.g., 3 cm. Rectangle: 3 cm × 6 cm.
2. Construct Rectangle:
• Draw AB = 6 cm (length).
• Construct perpendiculars at A and B.
• Mark AD = BC = 3 cm (breadth).
• Join DC. Rectangle ABCD ready.
3. Show Division:
• Find midpoint M of AB.
• Draw line through M parallel to AD (or perpendicular to AB).
• This line divides rectangle into two 3 cm × 3 cm squares.
(Planning, Construction, Analysis)
5. Construct a rectangle with one side 7 cm and a diagonal 9 cm. Verify rectangle properties.
Answer:
Construction Steps:
1. Draw side CD = 7 cm.
2. At C, draw perpendicular line `l`.
3. With D as center, radius 9 cm, draw arc cutting line `l` at B.
4. Now we have C, D, B. To find A:
• Method 1: Draw line through D parallel to CB.
• Method 2: With B as center, radius 7 cm, and with D as center, radius = BC, draw intersecting arcs at A.
5. Join A to B and A to D.

Verification:
• Measure opposite sides: CD = AB? AD = BC? (Should be equal).
• Measure angles: Check if ∠C, ∠D, ∠A, ∠B are 90° using protractor.
(Comprehensive Construction, Verification, Problem-Solving)
6. Construct a square with 8 cm side. Draw lines joining midpoints of opposite sides.
Answer:
Construction Steps:
1. Construct square PQRS with side 8 cm.
2. Find midpoints of each side:
• M = midpoint of PQ
• N = midpoint of QR
• O = midpoint of RS
• P = midpoint of SP
3. Draw lines:
• Join M to O (through center, horizontal)
• Join N to P (through center, vertical)

Observation:
• These lines intersect at center of square.
• They divide square into 4 equal smaller squares.
• They are perpendicular to each other.
(Construction, Analysis, Spatial Understanding)
7. Construct a rectangle where one diagonal divides opposite angles into 60° and 30°.
Answer:
Planning: At two opposite vertices, the 90° angle is split by diagonal into 60° and 30°.

Construction Steps:
1. Draw base AB of convenient length.
2. At A, construct 60° angle (using compass or protractor).
3. At A, also construct perpendicular to AB (this will be side AD).
4. The diagonal lies between AB and AD, making 60° with AB and 30° with AD.
5. Choose point D on perpendicular from A.
6. From D, draw line parallel to AB. From B, draw line parallel to AD.
7. Their intersection is C, completing rectangle.

Verification: Measure angles at A and C to ensure diagonal divides them into 60° and 30°.
(Advanced Construction, Planning, Verification)
8. Construct a "Wavy Wave" with central line 10 cm and half-circle waves.
Answer:
Construction Steps:
1. Draw central line AB = 10 cm.
2. Find midpoint X of AB (AX = XB = 5 cm).
3. First Wave (Half-circle above line):
• Place compass tip on A.
• Set radius to AX = 5 cm.
• Draw semicircular arc from A to X, above line AB.
4. Second Wave (Half-circle below line):
• Place compass tip on X.
• Keep same radius (5 cm).
• Draw semicircular arc from X to B, below line AB.

Result: Continuous wave pattern with alternating half-circles.
(Creative Construction, Procedural Application)
9. Draw two identical "Eyes" using compass construction.
Answer:
Strategy: Each eye = two symmetrical curves (upper and lower eyelid).

Construction Steps for One Eye:
1. Draw light horizontal guide line.
2. Mark two points L and R about 3-4 cm apart as ends of eye.
3. Find center points U (for upper curve) and D (for lower curve) vertically aligned.
4. U should be above guide line, D below it, on same vertical line.
5. With U as center, draw arc from L to R for upper curve.
6. With D as center, draw arc from L to R for lower curve.

For Second Eye:
• Repeat same process next to first eye.
• Ensure same size, alignment, and symmetry.

Key: Practice needed for good symmetry.
(Creative Construction, Symmetry, Precision)
10. Construct a square and then divide it into four equal smaller squares.
Answer:
Construction Steps:
1. Construct square PQRS of desired side, e.g., 8 cm.
2. Find midpoints of each side:
• M = midpoint of PQ
• N = midpoint of QR
• O = midpoint of RS
• T = midpoint of SP
3. Draw lines:
• Join M to O (horizontal through center)
• Join N to T (vertical through center)

Result:
• Square divided into 4 equal smaller squares.
• Each small square has side = half of original = 4 cm.
• All lines intersect at center of original square.

Verification: Measure sides of small squares to confirm equality.
(Construction, Division, Verification)

G. Case-Based Questions (5 Cases, each with 4 Sub-Questions)

Case 1: A rectangle has vertices A, B, C, D. AB = 6 cm, BC = 4 cm. Diagonals AC and BD intersect at O.
1. What is the length of CD?
a) 4 cm
b) 6 cm
c) 10 cm
d) 8 cm
Answer: b) 6 cm
CD is opposite to AB in rectangle ABCD.
(Data Interpretation, Applied Problem-Solving)
2. What is the length of diagonal AC?
a) 7.2 cm
b) 10 cm
c) 8.5 cm
d) 9 cm
Answer: a) 7.2 cm (approximately)
AC² = AB² + BC² = 6² + 4² = 36 + 16 = 52, AC = √52 ≈ 7.21 cm.
(Analytical Thinking, Numerical Application)
3. If ∠CAB = 30°, then ∠ACB =
a) 30°
b) 60°
c) 90°
d) 120°
Answer: b) 60°
In Ξ”ABC, ∠B = 90°, ∠CAB = 30°, so ∠ACB = 180° - (90° + 30°) = 60°.
(Geometric Reasoning)
4. How many pairs of equal triangles are formed by the diagonals?
a) 2
b) 4
c) 6
d) 8
Answer: b) 4
Four triangles: Ξ”AOB, Ξ”BOC, Ξ”COD, Ξ”DOA. They are equal in two pairs: Ξ”AOB ≅ Ξ”COD and Ξ”BOC ≅ Ξ”DOA.
(Analytical Thinking)
Case 2: A square sheet of side 10 cm is rotated to look like a diamond.
1. Is it still a square?
a) Yes
b) No
Answer: a) Yes
Rotation doesn't change side lengths or angles.
(Spatial Understanding)
2. What is the length of each side after rotation?
a) Changes
b) Remains 10 cm
c) Becomes 5 cm
d) Doubles
Answer: b) Remains 10 cm
Rotation is rigid transformation preserving lengths.
(Conceptual Understanding)
3. What is the angle between two adjacent sides after rotation?
a) 60°
b) 90°
c) 120°
d) 45°
Answer: b) 90°
Internal angles don't change with rotation.
(Spatial Understanding)
4. How many lines of symmetry does it have now?
a) 1
b) 2
c) 4
d) 0
Answer: c) 4
Square always has 4 lines of symmetry regardless of orientation.
(Spatial Understanding)
Case 3: In the "House" construction, all edges are 5 cm.
1. How many arcs are needed to locate point A?
a) 1
b) 2
c) 3
d) 4
Answer: b) 2
One arc from B (radius 5 cm) and one from C (radius 5 cm).
(Procedural Understanding)
2. What is the shape of the roof?
a) Triangle
b) Square
c) Circular arc
d) Rectangle
Answer: c) Circular arc
Roof is drawn as arc of circle with center A, radius 5 cm.
(Spatial Understanding)
3. Which tool is essential for this construction?
a) Protractor
b) Compass
c) Set-square
d) Divider
Answer: b) Compass
Compass needed for drawing arcs of radius 5 cm.
(Tool Knowledge)
4. The base BC is of length:
a) 5 cm
b) 10 cm
c) 15 cm
d) 20 cm
Answer: a) 5 cm
All edges are 5 cm, including base BC.
(Data Interpretation)
Case 4: A rectangle is divided into 3 identical squares.
1. If the shorter side of rectangle is 4 cm, the longer side is:
a) 8 cm
b) 12 cm
c) 16 cm
d) 20 cm
Answer: b) 12 cm
Longer side = 3 × shorter side = 3 × 4 = 12 cm.
(Analytical Thinking)
2. How many squares are formed in total?
a) 2
b) 3
c) 4
d) 6
Answer: b) 3
Case states rectangle is divided into 3 identical squares.
(Data Interpretation)
3. What is the perimeter of each small square?
a) 8 cm
b) 12 cm
c) 16 cm
d) 20 cm
Answer: c) 16 cm
Each square side = shorter side of rectangle = 4 cm. Perimeter = 4 × 4 = 16 cm.
(Numerical Application)
4. Can this rectangle be a square?
a) Yes
b) No
Answer: b) No
For square, length = breadth. Here 12 cm ≠ 4 cm.
(Logical Reasoning)
Case 5: Constructing rectangle given side and diagonal.
1. If side = 5 cm and diagonal = 13 cm, what is the other side?
a) 8 cm
b) 10 cm
c) 12 cm
d) 14 cm
Answer: c) 12 cm
Other side = √(13² - 5²) = √(169 - 25) = √144 = 12 cm.
(Numerical Application)
2. Which tool is used to draw the arc with diagonal as radius?
a) Ruler
b) Protractor
c) Compass
d) Set-square
Answer: c) Compass
Compass draws arcs of given radius.
(Tool Knowledge)
3. How many perpendicular lines are drawn in this construction?
a) 1
b) 2
c) 3
d) 4
Answer: b) 2
One at end of given side, and possibly one more to complete rectangle.
(Procedural Understanding)
4. What property of rectangle is used to verify the construction?
a) Diagonals are equal
b) All angles 90°
c) Opposite sides equal
d) All of these
Answer: d) All of these
All rectangle properties should be verified after construction.
(Verification Skills)

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