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" Right Lines that touch one another, and are •not in the fame Superficies: Or, a folid Angle is that which is contained under more than two plane Angles which are not in the fame Superficies, but being all at one Point. "
Euclide's Elements: The Whole Fifteen Books Compendiously Demonstrated. With ... - Page 269
by Euclid, Isaac Barrow - 1714 - 520 pages
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Euclid's Elements of Geometry: From the Latin Translation of Commandine. To ...

John Keill - Logarithms - 1723 - 444 pages
...Inclination of more than two Right Lines that touch one another, and are not in the fame Superficies: Or, a folid Angle is that which is contained under more than two plane Angles which are not in the fame Superficies, but being all at one Point. XII. A Pyramid is a folid Figure...
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Elements of Geometry, Briefly, Yet Plainly Demonstrated by Edmund Stone

Euclid - 1728 - 236 pages
...Inclination «f more than two Right Lines that touch one another, and are not in the fame Superficies : Or, a folid Angle is < . that which is contained under more than two plane singles which are not in the fame Superficies, but being all at one Point. XII. A Pyramid is a folid...
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Euclid's Elements of Geometry,: From the Latin Translation of Commandine. To ...

Euclid, John Keill - Geometry - 1733 - 444 pages
...Inclination of more than twer Right Lines that touch one another, and are •not in the fame Superficies: Or, a folid Angle is that which is contained under more than two plane Angles which are not in the fame Superficies, but being all at one Point. XII. A Pyramid is a folid Figure...
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Euclide's Elements: The Whole Fifteen Books Compendiously Demonstrated: with ...

Euclid - Euclid's Elements - 1751 - 420 pages
...touch one another, and are not in the fame fuperficies. i Or thus ; A folid angle is that which rs contained under more than two plane angles not being...fuperficies > but confifting all at one point. XII. A Pyramid is a folid figure comprehended under divers planes let upon one plane (which is the bafe of...
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Euclid's Elements of Geometry: The First Six, the Eleventh and Twelfth Books

Euclid - Geometry - 1765 - 492 pages
...inclination of more than two right lines, which touch one another and be not in the fame plane. .Or thus, a folid angle is that which is contained under more than two plane- angles not lying in the fame plane, and flanding at one point11. i2. A pyramid is a folid figure contained under...
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