By the end of this chapter you'll be able to…

  • 1Distinguish between a point, line segment, ray, and line
  • 2Define an angle and identify its vertex and arms
  • 3Classify angles as acute, right, obtuse, straight, reflex, or complete based on measure
  • 4Measure angles using a protractor with accuracy
  • 5Compare angles by observation, superimposition, and measurement
  • 6Understand that a right angle = 90° and a straight angle = 180°
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Why this chapter matters
Lines and Angles is the entry point to geometry. Every shape — triangles, quadrilaterals, circles — and every theorem in higher classes (Pythagoras, congruence, coordinate geometry) builds on the concepts of points, lines, rays, and angles introduced here. Without this foundation, geometry cannot be understood.

Before you start — revise these

A 5-minute refresher here will save you 30 minutes of confusion below.

Lines and Angles — Class 6 Maths (Ganita Prakash)

1. About This Chapter

Lines and Angles forms the foundation of geometry in the Ganita Prakash curriculum. The chapter introduces students to the basic geometric elements — points, line segments, lines, rays, and angles — that will be used throughout their mathematical journey from Class 6 through Class 12.

The chapter is structured to build understanding step by step:

  • First, the simplest element: a point
  • Then, connecting points to form line segments
  • Extending line segments to create rays and lines
  • Finally, combining two rays at a vertex to form angles

2. Points — The Simplest Element

A point is the most basic geometric idea. It represents a location in space. A point has no length, no breadth, and no thickness — it is just a position. We mark points with dots and label them with capital letters: A, B, C, etc.

Key ideas:

  • A point is dimensionless — only position
  • It is the starting point for all geometry
  • Every shape is made up of points

3. Line Segments

A line segment is the shortest path connecting two points. It has:

  • Two endpoints (the points where it starts and ends)
  • A fixed length that can be measured

We write a line segment connecting points A and B as AB or BA.

Example: The edge of a ruler, the side of a book, a pencil — these all represent line segments.


4. Lines

A line is what you get when you extend a line segment infinitely in both directions. A line:

  • Has no endpoints
  • Has infinite length
  • Is perfectly straight

We write a line passing through points A and B as .

Example: Imagine a straight road that goes on forever in both directions.


5. Rays

A ray is what you get when you extend a line segment infinitely in only ONE direction. A ray:

  • Has one endpoint (the starting point)
  • Extends infinitely in one direction

We write a ray starting at A and passing through B as .

Example: A beam of light from a torch — it starts at the torch and goes on indefinitely.

Comparison Table

FeatureLine SegmentRayLine
Endpoints210
LengthFixedInfiniteInfinite
NotationAB
ExampleEdge of a tableSunbeamHorizon

6. Angles

An angle is formed when two rays share a common endpoint. The common endpoint is called the vertex, and the two rays are called the arms or sides of the angle.

An angle with vertex B and arms BA and BC is written as or .


7. Types of Angles

Acute Angle

An angle that measures less than 90°.
Examples: 30°, 45°, 60°

Right Angle

An angle that measures exactly 90°.
The corner of a book or a square is a right angle. Marked with a small square symbol (∟).

Obtuse Angle

An angle that measures more than 90° but less than 180°.
Examples: 100°, 120°, 150°

Straight Angle

An angle that measures exactly 180°.
It looks like a straight line. Two right angles make a straight angle.

Reflex Angle

An angle that measures more than 180° but less than 360°.
Examples: 200°, 270°, 300°

Complete Angle

An angle that measures exactly 360° — a full rotation.


8. Comparing Angles

Angles can be compared without measuring:

  • By observation: Which angle looks bigger?
  • By superimposition: Trace one angle on tracing paper and place it over another
  • Using a protractor: Measure both and compare the readings

9. Measuring Angles with a Protractor

A protractor is a tool used to measure angles in degrees. Steps:

  1. Place the centre of the protractor on the vertex
  2. Align the base line with one arm of the angle
  3. Read the degree mark where the other arm crosses the protractor scale

10. Key Concepts Summary

ConceptDefinition
PointA location with no dimension
Line SegmentPart of a line with two endpoints and fixed length
RayPart of a line with one endpoint, infinite in one direction
LineInfinite straight path with no endpoints
AngleFigure formed by two rays with a common vertex
Acute AngleBetween 0° and 90°
Right AngleExactly 90°
Obtuse AngleBetween 90° and 180°
Straight AngleExactly 180°
Reflex AngleBetween 180° and 360°

11. Important Vocabulary

  • Vertex (plural: vertices): The common endpoint where two rays meet to form an angle
  • Protractor: A measuring instrument used to measure angles in degrees
  • Degree (°): The unit of measurement for angles
  • Ray: A part of a line that starts at a point and goes infinitely in one direction
  • Superimposition: Placing one figure on top of another to compare

12. Worked Examples

Example 1: Identify the angle type

What type of angle is formed at the corner of a square?

Solution: All four corners of a square measure exactly 90°, so each is a right angle.

Example 2: Classify angles

Classify: 45°, 130°, 90°, 210°

Solution:

  • 45° → Acute (less than 90°)
  • 130° → Obtuse (between 90° and 180°)
  • 90° → Right angle (exactly 90°)
  • 210° → Reflex (between 180° and 360°)

Example 3: Find the angle

At 3:00, what type of angle do the hour and minute hands make?

Solution: At 3:00, the hands are perpendicular, forming exactly 90° — a right angle.


13. Conclusion

Lines and Angles introduces the fundamental language of geometry. Every shape, from the simplest triangle to the most complex architectural design, is built from points, line segments, and angles. Mastering this chapter means you can describe and measure the world around you with mathematical precision.

Key formulas & results

Everything you need to memorise, in one card. Screenshot this for revision.

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Common mistakes & fixes

These are the exact errors that cost students marks in board exams. Read them once, save yourself the trouble.

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Practice problems

Try each one yourself before tapping "Show solution". Active recall > rereading.

Q1MEDIUM
How many right angles make a complete angle?
Show solution
4 right angles (4 × 90° = 360°)
Q2MEDIUM
Classify the angle: 155°
Show solution
Obtuse angle (between 90° and 180°)
Q3MEDIUM
At what time do the hour and minute hands form a straight angle?
Show solution
6:00 (the hands point in opposite directions, forming 180°)
Q4MEDIUM
What is the angle between the hands of a clock at 9:00?
Show solution
90° (right angle), as the hands are perpendicular

5-minute revision

The whole chapter, distilled. Read this the night before the exam.

  • Point: location only, no size
  • Line segment AB: two endpoints, fixed length
  • Ray: one endpoint, infinite in one direction
  • Line: no endpoints, infinite both directions
  • Angle types: Acute (0-90°), Right (90°), Obtuse (90-180°), Straight (180°), Reflex (180-360°)
  • Always place protractor centre exactly on vertex
  • Read the correct scale on the protractor

CBSE marks blueprint

Where the marks come from in this chapter — so you can plan your prep.

Where this shows up in the real world

This chapter isn't just an exam topic — it lives in the world around you.

Questions students ask

The real ones — pulled from the Q&A community and tutor sessions.

Verified by the tuition.in editorial team
Last reviewed on 1 June 2026. Written and reviewed by subject-matter experts — read about our process.
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