| Benjamin Greenleaf - Geometry - 1861 - 638 pages
...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.... | |
| Benjamin Greenleaf - Geometry - 1863 - 504 pages
...the arcs AD, EG will be equal. For, if the radii CD, 0 G are drawn, the triangles ACD, E 0 G, having the 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.... | |
| Benjamin Greenleaf - Geometry - 1866 - 328 pages
...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, AC... | |
| Charles Davies - Mathematics - 1867 - 186 pages
...need the following, which have been before proved ; viz. : Prop. X. (of Legendre). "If two triangles have the three sides of the one equal to the three sides of the other, each to each, the triangles will be equal in all their parts." Prop. V. " If two triangles have two sides and the... | |
| C. Davies - 1867 - 342 pages
...EAD will be equal to the angle KFor, draw the chord DE- Then the two triangles IKL and EAD, having the three sides of the one equal to the three sides of the other, each to each, the angle EAD will be equal -o the angle K (Bk- I- Th- viii)PROBLEM IXThrough a g1ven point to draw... | |
| Education - 1868 - 516 pages
...the other. " — Campbells Rhet. This structure is very often neglected. Examples : "If two triangles have the three sides of the one equal to the three sides of the other, each to each, the triangles will be equal in all their parts." The article before one here is improper, because the... | |
| James Maurice Wilson - Geometry - 1868 - 132 pages
...be constructed so as to have its sides equal to three given lines, it is clear that if two triangles have the three sides of the one equal to the three sides of the other, these triangles must be identical, or be equal in all respects. And a similar remark may be made on... | |
| Benjamin Greenleaf - Geometry - 1868 - 340 pages
...than ABC. PROPOSITION XVII. — THEOREM. ELEMENTS OP GEOMETRY. Let ABC, DBF be two triangles, having the three sides of the one equal to the three sides of the other, eaeh to each, namely, AB to DE, AC toDF, andCB toEF; then their triangles will be equivalent. Let 0... | |
| Bernhard Marks - Geometry - 1869 - 172 pages
...THEOREMS ILLUSTRATED. DB PROPOSITION XIX. THEOREM. DEMONSTRATION. We wish to prove that, If two triangles have the three sides of the one equal to the three sides of the other, each to each, they are equal in all their parts. Let the two triangles ABC, ADC, have the side AB of the one equal to the side AD... | |
| Horatio Nelson Robinson - 1869 - 276 pages
...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 equTl, and the equal angles are opposite the equal sides. In two triangles, as... | |
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