| George Albert Wentworth, George Anthony Hill - Arithmetic - 1887 - 448 pages
...AB, BO, which form the right angle, are called the legs, and the side AC is called the hypotenuse. The sum of the two acute angles of a right triangle is equal to one right angle, or 90°. If one of the acute angles is equal to 30°, the opposite side is... | |
| George Albert Wentworth - Algebra - 1892 - 312 pages
...AB, BC, which form the right angle, are called the legs, and the side AG is called the hypotenuse. The sum of the two acute angles of a right triangle is equal to on« right angle, or 90°. If one of the acute angles is equal to 30°, the opposite side... | |
| George Albert Wentworth - 1894 - 318 pages
...AB, BC, which form the right angle, are called the legs, and the side AG is called the hypotenuse. The sum of the two acute angles of a right triangle is equal to one right angle, or 90°. If one of the acute angles is equal to 30°, the opposite side is... | |
| William Chauvenet - Geometry - 1896 - 274 pages
...angle is the quotient of the hypotenuse divided by the adjacent side. Thus sec .4 = 4» 8ec B = о а 18. The COSINE, COTANGENT, and COSECANT of an angle,...to the preceding definitions, we shall have sin A = cos В = — cos A = sin В = — с с tan А =« cot В = — cot A = tan В = — ba sec A = cosec... | |
| George Albert Wentworth - Arithmetic - 1896 - 318 pages
...AB, BO, which form the right angle, are called the legs, and the side AC is called the hypotenuse. The sum of the two acute angles of a right triangle is equal to one right angle, or 90°. If one of the acute angles is equal to 30°, the opposite side is... | |
| George Albert Wentworth, George Anthony Hill - Arithmetic - 1897 - 476 pages
...AB, BC, which form the right angle, are called the legs, and the side AC is called the hypotenuse. The sum of the two acute angles of a right triangle is equal to ono right angle, or 90°. If one of the acute angles is equal to 30°, the opposite side is... | |
| George Washington Hull - Geometry - 1897 - 408 pages
...angles. 52. COR. 4.—A triangle cannot have two right angles, nor two obtuse angles. 53. COR. 5.— The sum of the two acute angles of a right triangle is equal to one right angle. PROPOSITION XVIII. THEOREM. 55. Two triangles are equal when two sides and... | |
| George William Myers - Arithmetic - 1908 - 350 pages
...inches in diameter. The specific gravity of cast iron is 7.2. Find the weight of the cast iron ring 108. The sum of the two acute angles of a right triangle is 90°. The acute angles are to each other as 1:2. Find them. HINT: Call one angle, x, and the other... | |
| Correspondence schools and courses - 1909 - 870 pages
...The side of a regular hexagon is equal to the radius of the circumscribed circle. Art. 85. (6) (a) The sum of the two acute angles of a right triangle is 90°, Art. 54; the required acute angle is, therefore, 90° - 37° = 53°. Ans. (6) The sum of the... | |
| William Charles Brenke - Algebra - 1910 - 376 pages
...23. tan Л and cot Л may have any value from 0 to oo . 128. Functions of Complementary Angles. — Since the sum of the two acute angles of a right triangle is 90°, they are complementary. By definition, we have . „ opp. side b sin В = -*vf = hyp. с cos... | |
| |