I have a circle as shown in the figure. In my text book, the angle BAD is the sum of angles ACD and angle ADC. There might be a theorem that shows this in the book but I cannot find it. Why is this true?

Adrian Brown

Adrian Brown

Answered question

2022-11-17

Qeustion about inscribed angle in a circle.

I have a circle as shown in the figure. In my text book, the angle BAD is the sum of angles ACD and angle ADC. There might be a theorem that shows this in the book but I cannot find it. Why is this true?

Answer & Explanation

dilettato5t1

dilettato5t1

Beginner2022-11-18Added 25 answers

Since if slopes of lines are different, then they will intersect at some point, parallel lines must have the same slope.
Hayley Mcclain

Hayley Mcclain

Beginner2022-11-19Added 3 answers

Step 1
A D C A C D, and by the triangle angle sum theorem and the figure m D A C = 90 , m A D C = m A C D = 45 .
Step 2
By the exterior angles theorem then, B A D = 90 = 45 + 45 = m A D C + m A C D

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