Start with two parallel lines — railway-track straight, always the same distance apart, never meeting. Now lay a third line across them at a slant. That crossing line has a proper name: a transversal. Where it cuts the two parallel lines it makes eight angles, and they're not all different. They come in matching families.
The Same Tilt, Twice
Here's the heart of it. Because the two lines are parallel, the transversal hits each of them at exactly the same tilt. So whatever set of four angles it makes at the top crossing, it makes the very same set again at the bottom crossing. Drag the amber dot in the toy and you'll see the top and bottom always stay in step — change one, the other changes to match.
The Three Families to Know
Corresponding angles sit in the same position at each crossing — top-right and top-right, say. Trace them and they make an F shape. They are equal. Alternate angles sit between the two lines but on opposite sides of the transversal; they trace a Z shape, and they're equal too. Co-interior angles sit between the lines on the same side, tracing a C (or U) shape — and these ones add up to 180° rather than matching.
A Quick Worked One
Say the acute angle the transversal makes is 55°. Then its corresponding partner is 55° (F, equal). Its alternate partner is 55° (Z, equal). And its co-interior partner is 180 − 55 = 125° (C, supplementary). One tilt, and every angle in the diagram is already decided.
Why It Only Works for Parallel Lines
The whole trick rests on the transversal meeting both lines at the same tilt — and that's only guaranteed when the lines are parallel. Tip one line even slightly and the matching breaks. That's why these are called the parallel-line angle rules, and why the little matching arrows (showing the lines are parallel) matter so much.