| Great Britain. Committee on Education - 1850 - 942 pages
...thickness. GEOMETRY AND TRIGONOMETRY. (One Question is only to be answered in each Section.) Section I. 1. All the interior angles of any rectilineal figure,...twice as many right angles as the figure has sides. 2. If the square described upon one side of a triangle be equal to the sum of the squares described... | |
| Her MAjesty' Inspectors of schools - 1850 - 912 pages
...ring. GEOMETRY AND TRIGONOMETRY. (One Question is only to be answered in each Section.) Section I. 1. All the interior angles of any rectilineal figure,...twice as many right angles as the figure has sides. 2. If the square described upon one side of a triangle be equal to the sum of the squares described... | |
| 1850 - 524 pages
...revelation could supersede the reasoning of the proposition that all the interior angles of any rectilinear figure, together with four right angles, are equal...twice as many right angles as the figure has sides : and the dictum is equally true, too, in moral science — only in any particular case to dogmatize... | |
| Charles Davies - Geometry - 1850 - 238 pages
...triangles is equal to two right angles (Th. xvii) : hence, the sum of the angles of all the triangles is equal to twice as many right angles as the figure has sides. But the sum of all the angles about the point P is equal to four right angles (Th. ii. Cor. 3) ; and... | |
| Charles Davies - Geometry - 1850 - 218 pages
...triangles is equal to two right angles (Th. xvii) : hence, the sum of the angles of all the triangles is equal to twice as many right angles as the figure has sides. But the sum of all the angles about the point P is equal to four right angles (Th. ii. Cor. 3) ; and... | |
| John William Colenso (bp. of Natal.) - 1851 - 382 pages
...such cases, where very great accuracy is not required. 16. It appears, from Eue. i. 32, Cor. 1, that ' all the interior angles of any rectilineal figure,...twice as many right angles as the figure has sides.' Hence if и be the number of sides of any rectilineal figure, we have the sum of its n angles + 4 x... | |
| Sir Henry Edward Landor Thuillier - Surveying - 1851 - 826 pages
...passing through the other end. In the 3rd Cor. Theor. V., (page 12,) it is stated and proved, " that all the interior angles of any rectilineal figure,...twice as many right angles as the figure has sides" or in other words that — In any rectilineal figure, the sum of all the interior angles, is equal... | |
| Education - 1851 - 502 pages
...three pickmen to every two shovellers, and to each workman 2s. 6d. per day. EUCLID. SECTION I.—1. All the interior angles of any rectilineal figure,...twice as many right angles as the figure has sides. SECTION II. — I. If a straight line drawn through the centre of a circle cuts another at right angles... | |
| Janet Taylor - Nautical astronomy - 1851 - 674 pages
...being the two angles made by cne line meeting another. The sum of all the outward and inward angles, is equal to twice as many right angles as the figure has sides; but the sum of all the inward angles is equal to twice as man1 right angles as the figure has sides,... | |
| sir Henry Yule - 1851 - 282 pages
...polygon may be found from the property of such figures, that the sum of the angles of any polygon is equal to twice as many right angles as the figure has sides, less four. The following technical terms require explanation : — A Salient Angle is one directed... | |
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