Two triangles on the same sphere or on equal spheres are either equal or symmetrical, if two sides and the included angle of one are respectively equal to two sides and the included angle of the other. Secondary-school Mathematics - Page 109by Robert Louis Short, William Harris Elson - 1910Full view - About this book
| Jacob William Albert Young - 1905 - 264 pages
...triangle are respectively equal to the three sides of another triangle, how are the triangles related? How if two sides and the included angle of one are respectively equal to two sides and the included angle of the other? 6. Two points are 8 in. apart; how may a point be found that is 10 in. from one of these... | |
| Jacob William Albert Young - Arithmetic - 1905 - 266 pages
...triangle are respectively equal to the three sides of another triangle, how are the triangles related? How if two sides and the included angle of one are respectively equal to two sides and the included angle of the other? 6. Two points are 8 in. apart ; how may a point be found that is 10 in. from one of these... | |
| Education - 1914 - 220 pages
...matter how long AB and AC are drawn, or what size angle A has? This proves Theorem II. Two triangles are equal if two sides and the included angle of one are equal respectively to two sides and the included angle of the other. Problem V. To construct a triangle... | |
| Education - 1907 - 880 pages
...fully appreciated as well as the truth itself more fully known. When he has learned that two triangles are equal if two sides and the included angle of one are equal to two sides and the included angle of the other, respectively, if he be asked to apply it in... | |
| Education - 1879 - 944 pages
...fully appreciated as well as the truth itself more fully known. When he has learned that two triangles are equal if two sides and the included angle of one are equal to two sides and the included angle of the other, respectively, if he be asked to apply it in... | |
| University of Mississippi - 1905 - 262 pages
...(a; — 1) 5 3. Solve (1) ~— -- x-- J/+1 4. Divide a + b — 3aW + c by a* + &* + c*. GEOMETRY. 1. Two parallelograms are equal, if two sides and the included angle of the one arc equal, respectively, to two sides and the included angle of the other. 2. The sum of the... | |
| Edward Rutledge Robbins - Geometry, Plane - 1906 - 268 pages
...angle of a parallelogram is 65°, find the other three. If one is 90°, find the others. 139. THEOREM. Two parallelograms are equal if two sides and the included angle of one are equal respectively to two sides and the included angle of the other. B, ,c M. ,N Given: SI AC ami LN;... | |
| Isaac Newton Failor - Geometry - 1906 - 440 pages
...parallelograms have an angle in each equal, they are mutually equiangular. PROPOSITION XXXIII. THEOREM 207 Two parallelograms are equal, if two sides and the included angle of the one are equal respectively to two sides and the included angle of the other. HYPOTHESIS. ABCD and... | |
| Isaac Newton Failor - Geometry - 1906 - 431 pages
...parallelograms have an angle in each equal, they are mutually equiangular. ,_ -. PROPOSITION XXXIII. THEOREM 207 Two parallelograms are equal, if two sides and the included angle of the one are equal respectively to two sides and the included angle of the other. B HYPOTHESIS. ABCD... | |
| Edward Rutledge Robbins - Geometry - 1907 - 428 pages
...angle of a parallelogram is 65°, find the other three. If one is 90°, find the others. 139. THEOREM. Two parallelograms are equal if two sides and the included angle of one are equal respectively to two sides and the included angle of the other. e _C M, .N Given : [SAC anil LN;... | |
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