SAT Practice TestSAT Math10 Questions~15 min

SAT Lines and Angles Practice Test — 10 Questions

A full SAT-style Lines and Angles practice test with 10 questions at varying difficulty levels. Answer every question, get instant feedback, and review detailed explanations to understand exactly where you went wrong.

10
Questions
15m
Est. Time
All
With Explanations
Yes
Free to Take
Just Practice Questions Instead

What to Expect on This Practice Test

Difficulty Mix

5 Easy · 3 Medium · 2 Hard — matching the real SAT distribution.

Instant Feedback

Know immediately if you're right. Read a detailed explanation after every answer.

Topic Covered

Lines and Angles — a key topic in the Geometry & Trigonometry section of SAT Math.

SAT Lines and Angles Practice Test

10 Questions
0 / 10 answered
1Easy

Two parallel lines are cut by a transversal. One same-side interior angle is 112°. What is the other?

2Easy

Vertical angles are congruent. If one measures 53°, what does the opposite vertical angle measure?

3Easy

An acute angle measures:

4Easy

Two complementary angles sum to:

5Easy

Two supplementary angles sum to:

6Medium

Parallel lines cut by a transversal: alternate interior angles are (2x + 14)° and 78°. What is x?

7Medium

In a triangle, two angles are 44° and 58°. What is the third angle?

8Medium

Two angles form a linear pair: (4x + 10)° and (2x + 8)°. Find x.

9Hard

Parallel lines; corresponding angles are (6x − 9)° and (4x + 21)°. Find x.

10Hard

Three angles on one side of a line through a point on the line are in ratio 2:3:5. What is the largest?

How to Improve Your SAT Lines and Angles Score

Identify your specific error pattern on this topic

After completing this practice test, look at every wrong answer and ask: 'Was this a content gap, a misread, or a careless error?' Each type has a different fix. Content gaps require review. Misreads require slowing down. Careless errors require double-checking.

Review every explanation, even correct answers

Understanding why an answer is right is as important as getting it right. Many students get lucky on questions they don't fully understand — those will come back to haunt them on test day.

Practice under time pressure

SAT Math questions should take about 1.2–1.5 minutes each. Once you understand the Lines and Angles concepts, practice with a timer. Speed comes from pattern recognition, which comes from repetition.

Drill Lines and Angles questions until they feel automatic

Use Blitzsat's question bank to filter specifically for Lines and Angles questions at medium and hard difficulty. Repeat until you can answer most questions in under 60 seconds.

Want More Lines and Angles Practice?

Blitzsat's full question bank has 2,500+ questions across every SAT topic. Filter by topic and difficulty. Track your progress. Generate AI-powered questions from your own notes. All free to start.

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