| Euclid - 1845 - 336 sider
...isosceles triangle in which the vertical angle is three times each angle at the base. 82. PROP. 12. To draw a straight line through a given point parallel to a given straight line. To draw a straight line through _ the given point C parallel to the "V* s\ given straight line AB.... | |
| 1902 - 714 sider
...astounding achievement of Bolyai's young genius, his § 34, where he solves for his universe, En., I, 31, To draw a straight line through a given point parallel to a given straight line. His brilliant lead was followed more than half a century later by Gerard, but it is Barbarin who has... | |
| Saskatchewan. Department of Education - 1913 - 202 sider
...distant from A and B; (b) Every point not in this line is unequally distant from A and B. 4. (a) To draw a straight line through a given point parallel to a given straight line. (b) To construct a parallelogram that shall be equal in all respects to a given parallelogram. 5. (a)... | |
| Wales univ, univ. coll. of Wales - 1878 - 188 sider
...that every point on the bisecting line is at equal distances from the sides containing the angle. 2. Draw a straight line through a given point parallel to a given straight line. 3. Prove that the three interior angles of every triangle are together equal to two right angles. 4.... | |
| 480 sider
...cannot however be proved by experiment to be true. It is conceivable that there might be more than one straight line through a given point parallel to a given straight line. Through a point O we can certainly draw more than one line which does not meet AB if produced to the... | |
| 464 sider
...opposite sides of a skew quadrilateral are equal, the opposite angles are equal. Ex. 1OB. Shew how to draw a straight line through a given point, parallel to a given plane, and at right angles to a given line. tEx. HO. On two lines I, I' (in general skew to one another)... | |
| 1910 - 874 sider
...able so far to deny the evidence of his senses as to take seriously the possibility of more than one straight line through a given point parallel to a given straight line. Even the temporary assumption of an absurd hypothesis, as in the reductio ad absurdum, seemed objectionable... | |
| Thomas Tate (Mathematical Master, Training College, Battersea.) - 1860 - 404 sider
...by experiment to be true; and conceivably it is not true. For why should there not be more than one straight line through a given point parallel to a given straight line 1 Through a point O we can certainly draw more than one line which does not meet AB if produced to... | |
| |