Page images
PDF
EPUB
[merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][ocr errors][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small]

LELAND STANFORD JUNIOR UNIVER

ELEMENTS OF GEOMETRY.

BOOK I.

ELEMENTARY PRINCIPLES.

DEFINITIONS.

1. GEOMETRY is the science of Position and Extension. The elements of position are direction and distance.

The dimensions of extension are length, breadth, and height or thickness.

2. MAGNITUDE, in general, is that which has one or more of the three dimensions of extension.

3. A POINT is that which has position, without magnitude.

4. A LINE is that which has length, without either breadth or thickness.

5. A STRAIGHT LINE, or RIGHT LINE, is one which has the same direction in its whole extent; as the line. A B.

A

-B

The word line is frequently used alone, to designate a straight line.

6. A. CURVED LINE is one which

continually changes its direction ; C

as the line CD.

D

The word curve is frequently used to designate a curved line.

7. A BROKEN LINE is one which is

composed of straight lines, not lying in the same direction; as the line EF.

[blocks in formation]

8. A MIXED LINE is one which is composed of straight lines and of curved lines.

9. A SURFACE is that which has length and breadth, without height or thickness.

10. A PLANE SURFACE, or simply a PLANE, is one in which any two points being taken, the straight line that joins them will lie wholly in the surface.

11. A CURVED SURFACE is one that is not a plane surface, nor made up of plane surfaces.

12. A SOLID, or VOLUME, is that which has length, breadth, and thickness.

ANGLES AND LINES.

13. A PLANE ANGLE, or simply an ANGLE, is the difference in the direction of two lines, which meet at a

point; as the angle A.

A

-B

The point of meeting, A, is the vertex of the angle, and

the lines A B, AC are the sides of the angle.

An angle may be designated, not

A

D

-B

only by the letter at its vertex, as C, but by three letters, particularly when two or more angles have the same vertex; as the angle ACD or DCB, the letter at the vertex always occupying the middle place.

C

The quantity of an angle does not depend upon the length, but entirely upon the position, of the sides; for the angle remains the same, however the lines containing it be increased or diminished.

14. Two straight lines are said to be perpendicular to each other, when their meeting forms equal adjacent angles; thus the lines A B and CD are perpendicular to each other.

B

C

A

-D

Two adjacent angles, as C A B and BAD, have a common vertex, as A; and a common side, as A B.

15. A RIGHT ANGLE is one which is formed by a straight line and a perpendicular to it; as the angle CAB.

C

16. An ACUTE ANGLE is one which is less than a right angle; as the angle DEF.

-B

A

D

E

F

E

An OBTUSE ANGLE is one which is greater than a right angle; as the

angle EFG.

F

G

Acute and obtuse angles have their sides oblique to each other, and are sometimes called oblique angles.

17. PARALLEL LINES are such as, being in the same plane, cannot meet, however far either way both of them may be produced; as the lines A B, CD.

18. When a straight line, as EF, intersects two parallel lines, as AB, CD, the angles formed A by the intersecting or secant line take particular names, thus:

INTERIOR ANGLES ON THE SAME SIDE are those which lie within

the parallels, and on the same

A

-B

C

-D

[merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][ocr errors]
[blocks in formation]

ALTERNATE INTERIOR ANGLES lie within the parallels, and on different sides of the secant line, but are not adjacent to each other; as the angles BGH, GHC, and also AGH, GHD.

ALTERNATE EXTERIOR ANGLES lie without the parallels, and on different sides of the secant line, but not adjacent to each other; as the angles EGB, CHF, and also the angles A GE, DHF.

OPPOSITE EXTERIOR and INTERIOR ANGLES lie on the same side of the secant line, the one without and the other within the parallels, but not adjacent to each other; as the angles EGB, GHD, and also EGA, GHC, are, respectively, the opposite exterior and interior angles.

PLANE FIGURES.

19. A PLANE FIGURE is a plane terminated on all sides

by straight lines or curves.

The boundary of any figure is called its perimeter.

[blocks in formation]

21. A polygon of three sides is called a TRIANGLE; one of four sides, a QUADRILATERAL; one of five, a PENTAGON; one of six, a HEXAGON; one of seven, a HEPTAGON; one

« PreviousContinue »