| Elizabethan club - 1880 - 156 pages
...the obtuse angles. 3. All the angles of a rectilineal figure, together with four right angles, are equal to twice as many right angles as the figure has sides. A floor has to be laid with tiles in the form of regular figures all equal and similar ; show what... | |
| Oxford univ, local exams - 1880 - 396 pages
...circle. 2. All the interior angles of any rectilineal figure, together with four right angles, are equal to twice as many right angles as the figure has sides. 3. If the square described on one side of a triangle be equal to the squares described on the other... | |
| Euclides - Euclid's Elements - 1881 - 236 pages
...ED COR. 1. — All the interior angles of any rectilineal figure together with four right angles are equal to twice as many right angles as the figure has sides. Let ABCDE be any rectilineal figure. All the interior angles ABC, BCD, &c. together with four right angles are equal... | |
| Thomas Newton Andrews - Geometry - 1881 - 168 pages
...proved that "All the interior angles of any rectilineal figure, together with four right angles, are equal to twice as many right angles as the figure has sides." If we have to describe a pentagon on the base AB, we must first calculate the angles at the base. Thus... | |
| John Gibson - 1881 - 302 pages
...opposite to it. 3. All the interior angles of any rectilineal figure, together with four right angles, are equal to twice as many right angles as the figure has sides. 4. Describe a parallelogram that shall be equal to a given triangle BCD, and have one of its angles... | |
| Thomas Holloway (surveyor.) - 1881 - 132 pages
...degrees. 3. All the interior angles of any rectilineal figure, together with four right angles, are equal to twice as many right angles as the figure has sides. Although further systems of proof could easily be quoted, I consider the foregoing quite sufficient... | |
| Marianne Nops - 1882 - 278 pages
...away these vertical angles and we have remaining the interior angles of the figure, which will clearly be equal to twice as many right angles as the figure has sides, less four right angles. IV. If we produce all the sides of this figure, we shall have an exterior angle... | |
| 1882 - 376 pages
...angles; and that all the interior angles of any rectilineal n'gure, together with four right angles, are equal to twice as many right angles as the figure has sides. 3. If the square described upon one of the sides of a triangle is equal to the squares described upon... | |
| 1882 - 486 pages
...EXPLANATIONS. 1. All the internal angles of any convex rectilineal figure, together with four right angles, are equal to twice as many right angles as the figure has sides (Euclid I., 32 Cor.) n denoting the number of sides : and T two right angles. (n — 2) T = angles... | |
| College of preceptors - 1882 - 528 pages
...referred to. 5. All the interior angles of any rectilineal figure, together with four right angles, are equal to twice as many right angles as the figure has sides. 6. The opposite sides and angles of a parallelogram are equal ; and the diameter bisects the parallelogram.... | |
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