| William E. Bell - 1857 - 250 sider
...1. The diagonal of a parallelogram divides it into two equal triangles. Cor. 2. When two triangles have the three sides of the one equal to the three sides of the other, the angles opposite the equal sides are also equal, and the triangles themselves are equal. Cor. 3.... | |
| W. Davis Haskoll - 1858 - 422 sider
...be subtended by the greater side, and the lesser angle by the lesser side. Any two triangles having the three sides of the one equal to the three sides of the other, are equal, equilateral, and equiangular. Any two triangles having each an equal angle contained by... | |
| Elias Loomis - 1858 - 256 sider
...equal, each to each, and the triangles themselves will be equal Let ABC, DEF be two triangles having the three sides of the one equal to the three sides of the other, viz. : AB equal to DE. BC to EF, and AC to DF ; then will the three angles also be equal, viz. : the... | |
| William E. Bell - 1859 - 226 sider
...1. The diagonal of a parallelogram divides it into two equal triangles. Cor. 2. "When two triangles have the three sides of the one equal to the three sides of the other, the angles opposite the equal sides are also equal, and the triangles themselves arc equal. Cor. 3.... | |
| Horatio Nelson Robinson - 1860 - 470 sider
...the theorem ; the difference between any two sidei of a triangle, etc. THEOREM XXI. If two triangles have the three sides of the one equal to the three sides of the other, each to each, the two triangles are eqml, and the equal angles are opposite the equal sides. In two triangles, as... | |
| George Roberts Perkins - 1860 - 472 sider
...parallelogram are equal, as in the case of a rhombus, we have AB = AD, and the two triangles AEB and AED will have the three sides of the one equal to the three sides of the other respectively, consequently they will be equal (T. XXV.), and the angle AEB = AED, that is, in a rhombus... | |
| Euclides - 1861 - 464 sider
...make a rectil. ¿. = я rcctil. ¿. DEM. 32, I. — I, VI.; 11, V.; 9, V.; 8, I.— Triangles having the three sides of the one equal to the three sides of the other, have the ¿.s equal which are contained by eq. sides. 4, I. If two д s have each two sides and their... | |
| Benjamin Greenleaf - 1862 - 532 sider
...the angle A must be greater than the angle D. PROPOSITION XVIII. — THEOREM. 80. If two triangles have the three sides of the one equal to the three sides of the other, each to each, the triangles themselves will be equal. Let the triangles ABC, DEF have the side AB equal to DE, А... | |
| Benjamin Greenleaf - 1862 - 518 sider
...mutually equilateral, they are equivalent. ELEMENTS OF GEOMETRY. Let ABC, DEF be two triangles, having the three sides of the one equal to the three sides of the other, each to each, namely, AB to DE, AC to DF, andCBtoEF; then their triangles will be equivalent. Let 0 he the pole of... | |
| Benjamin Greenleaf - 1861 - 638 sider
...arcs AD, EG will be equal. For, if the radii CD, 0 G are drawn, the triangles ACD, E 0 G, having tlffe three sides of the one equal to the three sides of the other, each to each, are themselves equal (Prop. XVIII. Bk. I.) ; therefore the angle ACD is equal to the angle E 0 G (Prop.... | |
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