| Euclides - 1846 - 292 pages
...EDF. Wherefore, If two triangles fp. QET>. PROP. XXVI. THEOR. If two triangles have two angles of the one equal to two angles of the other, each to each, and one side equal to one side, viz. either the sides adjacent to the equal angles, or sides which are... | |
| Great Britain. Admiralty - Geometry - 1846 - 128 pages
...Wherefore, if two triangles, &c. PROP. XXV. THEOR. 26. lEu. If two triangles have two angles of the one, equal to two angles of the other, each to each, and one side equal to one side ; viz. either the sides adjacent to the equal angles, or the sides opposite... | |
| Great Britain. Admiralty - Geometry - 1846 - 128 pages
...Wherefore, if two triangles, &c. PROP. XXV. THEOR. 26. lEu. If two triangles have two angles of the one, equal to two angles of the other, each to each, and one side equal to one side ; viz. either shall the other sides be equal, each to each, and also the... | |
| Samuel Hunter Christie - 1847 - 172 pages
...angle AEG is equal to the angle BEH (I. 15): therefore the triangles AEG, BEH have two angles of the one equal to two angles of the other, each to each, and the sides AE, EB, adjacent to the equal angles, equal to one another: wherefore they have their other sides... | |
| Euclides - 1847 - 128 pages
...converse of the preceding. PROP. XXVI. THEOR. GEN. EMUN. — If two triangles have two angles of the one equal to two angles of the other, each to each, and one side equal to one side, viz. either the sides adjacent to the equal angles, or the sides opposite... | |
| Euclid, Thomas Tate - 1849 - 120 pages
...greater than the angle EDF. Wherefore if two triangles, &c. QED PROP. XXVI. THEOB. If two triangles have two angles of one equal to two angles of the other, each to each ; and one side equal to one side, viz. either the sides adjacent to the equal angles, or the sides opposite... | |
| Elias Loomis - Conic sections - 1849 - 252 pages
...angles GHE, HEF are also equal. Therefore, the triangles HEF, EHG have two angles of the one euual to two angles of the other, each to each, and the side Ell included between the equal angles, common; hence the triangles are equal (Prop. VII.); and the... | |
| Euclides - 1852 - 152 pages
...cardboard, so as to exemplify the two last propositions.] PROP. XXVI. THEOR. If two triangles have two angles of one equal to two angles of the other, each to each ; and one side equal to one side, viz. either the sides adjacent to the equal angles, or the sides opposite... | |
| Royal Military Academy, Woolwich - Mathematics - 1853 - 400 pages
...HCF is equal to KCF, and the right angle FHC equal to the right angle FKC, in the triangles FHC, FKC there are two angles of one equal to two angles of the other ; and the side FC, which is opposite to one of the equal angles in each, is common to both ; therefore... | |
| Euclides - Geometry - 1853 - 176 pages
...equal to kcf, and the right angle fhc equal to the right angle fkc ', in the triangles f b. c, fkc there are two angles of one equal to two angles of the other, and the side fc, which is opposite to one of the equal angles in each, is common to both; therefore... | |
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