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" Two straight lines which intersect one another cannot be both parallel to the same straight line. "
Self-examinations in Euclid - Page 24
by John Martin Frederick Wright - 1829 - 188 pages
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Elements of Geometry: Containing the First Six Books of Euclid, with a ...

John Playfair - Mathematics - 1806 - 320 pages
...one another. IX. The whole is greater than its part. X. All right angles are equal to one another. " Two straight lines, which intersect one another, cannot be " both parallel to the same straight line." Book I. PROPOSITION I. PROBLEM. TO describe an equilateral triangle upon a given finite straight line....
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Elements of Geometry: Containing the First Six Books of Euclid, with a ...

John Playfair - Circle-squaring - 1819 - 350 pages
...appeared more obvious, and better entitled to be accounted an Axiom, has been introduced, viz. " that two straight " lines, which intersect one another,...be both parallel to the •" same straight line." On this subject, however, a fuller explanation is necessary, for which see the note on the 29th Prop....
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Elements of Arithmetic, Algebra, and Geometry

George Lees - 1826 - 276 pages
...and equal to all its parts taken together. X. — All right angles are equal to one another. XI. — Two straight lines, which intersect one another, cannot be both parallel to the same straight line. XII. — The shortest distance between two points is a straight line. OF GEOMETRY. Book I. PROPOSITION...
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The Teacher's Assistant in the "Course of Mathematics Adapted to the Method ...

Mathematics - 1836 - 488 pages
...another. 9. The whole is greater than its part. 10. All right angles are equal to one another. 11. " Two straight lines which intersect one another, cannot be both parallel to the same straight line." PROP. IV. If two triangles have two sides of the one equal to two sides of the other, each to each...
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The First Six and the Eleventh and Twelfth Books of Euclid's Elements: With ...

Euclid, James Thomson - Geometry - 1837 - 410 pages
...parallels is founded on the following axiom, suggested by Ludlam in his Rudiments of Mathematics : " Two straight lines which intersect one another, cannot be both parallel to the same straight line :" and from this he derives, indirectly, in a very simple manner, the proof of the first part of the...
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Elements of Geometry: Containing the First Six Books of Euclid, with a ...

John Playfair - Euclid's Elements - 1842 - 332 pages
...another. 9. The whole is greater than its part. 10. All right angles are equal to one another. 11. "Two straight lines which intersect one another, cannot be both pa"rallel to the same straight line." PROPOSITION I. PROBLEM. To describe an equilateral triangle upon a given finite straight lint.' Let...
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Lectures on the Principles of Demonstrative Mathematics

Philip Kelland - Algebra - 1843 - 168 pages
...— 9. nition. Unfortunately, however, he is obliged afterwards to assume the truth of another axiom, viz. " two straight lines which intersect one another...cannot be both parallel to the same straight line."* 3, The definition is exceedingly complex and difficult to be understood. It appears to me, then, that...
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The First Six, and the Eleventh and Twelfth Books of Euclid's Elements: With ...

Euclid, James Thomson - Geometry - 1845 - 382 pages
...parallels is founded on the following axiom, suggested by Ludlam in his Rudiments of Mathematics : " Two straight lines which intersect one another, cannot be both parallel to the same straight line. From this the author derives, indirectly, in a very simple manner, the proof of the first part of the...
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Euclid's Elements of geometry [book 1-6, 11,12] with explanatory notes ...

Euclides - 1845 - 546 pages
...the converse of Prop. 27, Book i. Professor Playfair has adopted in his Elements of Geometry, that " Two straight lines which intersect one another cannot be both parallel to the same straight line." This apparently more simple axiom follows as a direct inference from Prop. 30, Book I. But one of the...
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Elements of Geometry: Containing the First Six Books of Euclid, with a ...

Euclid, John Playfair - Euclid's Elements - 1846 - 334 pages
...appeared more obvious, and better entitled to be accounted an Axiom, has been introduced, viz. " that two straight lines, which intersect one another, can"not be both parallel to the same straight line." On this subject, however, a fuller explanation is necessary, for which see the note on the 29th Prop....
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