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" If two triangles have two sides of the one equal respectively to two sides of the other, but the included angle of the first greater than the included angle of the second, then the third side of the first is greater than the third side of the second.... "
Plane Geometry - Page 74
by Edith Long, William Charles Brenke - 1916 - 276 pages
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Principles of Plane Geometry

James Wallace MacDonald - Geometry - 1889 - 80 pages
...Three different cases may arise ; prove each. Proposition XXXII. A Theorem. 69. Conversely, if two triangles have two sides of the one respectively equal to two sides of the other and the included angles unequal, the angle opposite the longer third side will be greater than the...
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Principles of Plane Geometry

James Wallace MacDonald - Geometry - 1894 - 76 pages
...triangle having sides equal to the sides of a given triangle. Proposition XXXI. A Theorem. 68. If two triangles have two sides of the one respectively equal to two sides of the other and the included angles unequal, the third side of the one having the greater angle will be longer...
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The Elements of Solid Geometry

Robert Baldwin Hayward - Geometry, Solid - 1890 - 160 pages
...Hence prove VIII. 4 directly without the aid of the polar triangles. X. — Ambiguous Cases. 1 . If two triangles have two sides of the one respectively equal to two sides of the other and the angles opposite to one pair of equal sides equal, then the angles opposite to the other pair...
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A Text-book of Geometrical Deductions

James Andrew Blaikie, William Thomson - Geometry - 1891 - 160 pages
...I. 38 to show AABD = AACD, AGBD = AGCD; ... AGAB = AGCA; .'. their halves are equal, etc. 7. If two triangles have two sides of the one respectively equal to two sides of the other and the contained angles supplementary, the triangles shall be equal in area. Place the triangles so...
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The Foundations of Geometry

Edward Travers Dixon - Geometry - 1891 - 180 pages
...equal to them of the other triangle. Hence the triangles are congruent. [I. 10. PROPOSITION XV. If two triangles have two sides of the one respectively equal to two sides of the other, and an angle of the one triangle opposite one of those sides equal to that opposite the equal side...
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Plane and Solid Geometry

Seth Thayer Stewart - Geometry, Modern - 1891 - 428 pages
...opposite these sides in the other, are equal in all their parts. (Same.) Corollary IV. Two triangles, with two sides of the one respectively equal to two sides of the other, the two angles opposite these sides, in each triangle, being both acute, or one acute and the other...
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Elementary Synthetic Geometry

George Bruce Halsted - Geometry - 1896 - 208 pages
...third, that cutting the axis is the greater. Proof. BA = BC + CA' ; BC+ CA > BA'. 304. Theorem. If two triangles have two sides of the one respectively equal to two sides of the other, but the included angles unequal, then that third side is the greater which is opposite the greater angle. Proof. Slide...
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Report of the Secretary for Public Instruction ...

Queensland. Department of Public Instruction - Education - 1892 - 508 pages
...be careful to give the authority for each step. 10 2. Under what conditions are two triangles, which have two sides of the one respectively equal to two sides of the other, equal to one another ? 14 3. Give the enunciation and construction of I. II. 14 4. Prove that the parallelograms...
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Elementary Geometry

William Chauvenet - 1893 - 340 pages
...the triangle which has the greater included angle has the greater third side. PROPOSITION XV. If two triangles have two sides of the one respectively equal to two sides of the other, and the third sides unequal, the triangle which has the greater third side has the greater included...
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Annual Report

1894 - 1136 pages
...if he had 8 less of each he would only have 6 geese for 7 ducks. How many had he of each ? 7. If two triangles have two sides of the one respectively equal to two sides of the other, but the contained • angles unequal, the base of the triangle which has the greater contained angle shall...
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