Concrete Geometry by the Inductive Method ...

Front Cover
Potter, 1896 - Geometry - 158 pages
 

Common terms and phrases

Popular passages

Page 76 - The areas of two circles are to each other as the squares of their radii. For, if S and S' denote the areas, and R and R
Page 145 - If one angle of a triangle is equal to the sum of the other two, the triangle can be divided into two isosceles triangles.
Page 43 - A ladder 82 ft. long stands close against a building ; how far must it be drawn out at the bottom that the top may be lowered 2 feet?
Page 67 - O as a center. and a radius equal to the radius of the button head, describe a circle.
Page 52 - This is only a corollary of the theorem that the areas of similar triangles are to each other as the squares of their sides.
Page 46 - How many degrees are there in the sum of the angles of each triangle ? How many degrees are there in the sum of the angles of a parallelogram?
Page 158 - A lune is a portion of the surface of a sphere bounded by two semicircumferences of great circles.
Page 104 - The solidities of similar solids are to each other as the cubes of their like dimensions.
Page 48 - Prove that the diagonals of a rhombus bisect each other at right angles.

Bibliographic information