| Adrien Marie Legendre - Geometry - 1822 - 394 pages
...same order ; that is to say, when following their perimeters in the same direction, the first side of the one is equal to the first side of the other, the second of the one to the second of the other, the third to the third, and so on. The phrase, mutually equiangular,... | |
| John Playfair - Euclid's Elements - 1835 - 336 pages
...same order ; that is to say, when following their perimeters in the same direction, the first side of the one is equal to the first side of the other, the second of the one to the second of the other, the third to the third, and so on. The phrase mutually equiangular... | |
| James Bates Thomson - Geometry - 1844 - 268 pages
...same order ; that is to say, when following their perimeters in the same direction, the first side of the one is equal to the first side of the other, the second of the one to the second of the other, the third to the third, and so on. The phrase, mutually equiangular,... | |
| Nathan Scholfield - 1845 - 894 pages
...in the same order, that is, when following their perimeters in the same direction, the first side of one is equal to the first side of the other, the second of one to the second of the other, the third to the third, and so on. The phrase, mutually equiangular,... | |
| George Roberts Perkins - Geometry - 1847 - 326 pages
...roofs of buildings, and to the pediment which surmounts and adorns porticos, doors and windows. XXII. A diagonal of a polygon is a line joining the vertices of two angles, not adjacent. (19.) From the above definitions, in connection with the diagrams, it will be readily seen... | |
| Charles Davies - Trigonometry - 1849 - 372 pages
...angles equal. ' that is to say, when following their perimeters in the same direction, the first side of the one is equal to the first side of the other, the second of the one to the second of the other, the third to the third, and so on. The phrase, mutually equiangular,... | |
| George Roberts Perkins - Geometry - 1850 - 332 pages
...roofs of buildings, and to the pediment which surmounts and adorns porticos, doors and windows. XXII. A diagonal of a polygon is a line joining the vertices of two angles, not adjacent. (24.) From the above definitions, in connection with the diagrams, it will be readily seen... | |
| Adrien Marie Legendre - Geometry - 1852 - 436 pages
...same order : that is to say, when following their bounding lines in the same direction, the first side of the one is equal to the first side of the other, the second to the second, the third to the third, and so on. 22. Two polygons are mutually equiangular, when every... | |
| Charles Davies - Navigation - 1852 - 412 pages
...same order : that is to say, when following their bounding lines in the same direction, the first side of the one is equal to the first side of the other, the second to the second, the third to the third, and so on. 22. Two polygons are mutually equiangular, when every... | |
| Charles Davies - Geometry - 1854 - 436 pages
...same order : that is to say, when following their bounding lines in the same direction, the first side of the one is equal to the first side of the other, the second to the second, the third to the third, and so on. 22. Two polygons are equiangular, or mutually equiangular,... | |
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