| Adrien Marie Legendre - Geometry - 1836 - 394 pages
...BO + OC< BD + DC ; therefore, still more is BO + OC<BA+AC. PROPOSITION IX. THEOREM. If two triangles have two sides of the one equal to two sides of the other, each to each, and the included angles unequal, the third sides will be unequal; and the greater side will belong... | |
| Mathematics - 1836 - 488 pages
...intersect one another, cannot be both parallel to the same straight line." PROP. IV. If two triangles have two sides of the one equal to two sides of the other, each to each ; and have likewise the angles contained by those sides equal to one another, their bases, or... | |
| Schoolmaster - 1836 - 926 pages
...as possible, and also of many superfluous phrases. For instance, " if there be two triangles which have two sides of the one equal to two sides of the other, each to each, &c." The phrase in italics is not an English idiom, but the literal translation of the Greek... | |
| John Playfair - Geometry - 1836 - 148 pages
...to them, viz. the angle ABC to the angle DEF, and the angle ACB to DFE. Therefore, if two triangles have two sides of the one equal to two sides of the other, each to each, and have likewise the angles contained by those sides equal to one another ; their bases shall... | |
| Education - 1836 - 502 pages
...as possible, and also of many superfluous phrases. For instance, " if there be two triangles which have two sides of the one equal to two sides of the other, each to each, &c." The phrase in italics is not an English idiom, but the literal translation of the Greek... | |
| Euclides - Euclid's Elements - 1837 - 112 pages
...a given rectilineal angle. Proved by Proposition VIII. PROPOSITION XXIV. Theorem. If two triangles have two sides of the one equal to two sides of the other, each to each, but the angle contained by two sides of one of them greater than the angle contained by the two... | |
| Andrew Bell - Euclid's Elements - 1837 - 290 pages
...straight lines, a part AE has been cut off equal to C, the less. PROPOSITION IV. THEOREM. If two triangles have two sides of the one equal to two sides of the other, each to each, and have likewise the angles contained by those sides equal to one another, thenbases, or third... | |
| Charles Reiner - Geometry - 1837 - 254 pages
...connectedly the different truths we have established respecting two such triangles. P. — If two triangles have two sides of the one equal to two sides of the other, each to each, and have likewise the angles contained by those sides equal to each other — their . third sides... | |
| Euclid, James Thomson - Geometry - 1837 - 410 pages
...A is made equal to the given angle C : which was to be done, f PROP. XXIV. THEOR. IF two triangles have two sides of the one equal to two sides of the other, each to each, but the angles contained by those sides unequal : the base of that which has the greater angle... | |
| Edward Tagart - Logic - 1837 - 156 pages
...question within a certain class, viz. the class of angles subtended by equal bases, in triangles which have two sides of the one equal to two sides of the other, of which equality is demonstrated ia the fourth proposition : and let us remember that every... | |
| |