Classifying triangles: Word Problems
Grade 4 · Geometry · CCSS.Math.4.G
- A triangle with one 90° angle is a ___ triangle
- A triangle with all angles less than 90° is an ___ triangle
- A triangle with one angle greater than 90° is an ___ triangle
- A triangle with three equal sides is ___
- A triangle with two equal sides is ___
- A triangle with no equal sides is ___
This is the preview. Hit "Print this worksheet" above to open a clean, ad-free, one-page version with name and date lines and writing space for each problem. A separate answer key prints on the second page for the grown-up. Tear it off before handing the practice page to your child.
Use this free Grade 4 math worksheet to help your child master Classifying triangles. It belongs to our Geometry collection, aligns with CCSS.Math.4.G, and is built so a kid with a sharp pencil can finish a meaningful round of practice in roughly ten minutes.
We organize the page so the easier warm-up problems sit at the top and the more challenging stretch questions sit near the bottom, giving students a confidence boost before they reach the harder work. By the end of the page, learners should be able to explain their strategy in a sentence, not just write an answer.
This page works well as morning math, as a center rotation, as a short homework assignment, or as a quick formative check before a quiz. The same one-page format also makes it easy to keep a small folder of completed work as evidence for parent–teacher conferences.
Want a different angle on this skill? Try the matching variants in our Grade 4 · Geometry collection, or jump up to the cross-grade Geometry hub.
Parents tell us the most useful thing about this Classifying triangles page is how fast they can hand it to a kid. No login. No PDF locked behind an email gate. Click print, hand it over, get ten quiet minutes of real math practice without prepping anything.
This worksheet is aligned to Common Core State Standard CCSS.Math.4.G and supports the broader Geometry progression that students continue to build through later grades. The same skill is revisited each year with greater abstraction, so the work your student does on this single sheet feeds into the multi-digit and multi-step problems they will see in middle school.
Looking for more Geometry practice? Browse the rest of the Grade 4 collection for related printables that scaffold the same standard from different angles.
Sample problems on this worksheet
- A triangle with one 90° angle is a ___ triangle
- A triangle with all angles less than 90° is an ___ triangle
- A triangle with one angle greater than 90° is an ___ triangle
- A triangle with three equal sides is ___
- A triangle with two equal sides is ___
- A triangle with no equal sides is ___
How to use this worksheet
Print one copy per child on standard letter or A4 paper. Set a quiet 10 to 15 minute window. Hand your student a sharpened pencil and an eraser, and let them work top to bottom. The first row is a warm-up on purpose. The last row is a stretch on purpose. Sit with them as they finish so any misconceptions surface right away instead of getting practiced into a bad habit.
If your student finishes quickly, flip the page over and ask them to write two new problems of their own that target the same skill. It's a powerful retention move. If they get stuck, pull out manipulatives that match the skill (counters for early addition, base-ten blocks for place value, fraction tiles for fractions) and work through one or two problems together before letting them try the rest on their own.
Common Core alignment
This page targets CCSS.Math.4.G inside the broader Geometry progression. The skill is introduced earlier in elementary school through concrete representations and revisited each year with greater abstraction. To see how it develops across grade levels, visit our Geometry hub. To see the rest of the Grade 4 work in this strand, visit the Grade 4 · Geometry collection.