Short, But Yet Plain Elements of Geometry: Shewing how by a Brief and Easie Method, Most of what is Necessary and Useful in Euclid, Archimedes, Appollonius, and Other Excellent Geometricians, Both Ancient and Modern, May be Understood |
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... Cone and Sphere to the circumfcribing Cylinder ; the Figure of the 5 regular Bodies ; feveral Additions and Improve- ments in the Doctrine of Proportion : The Menfura- tion of the Fruftums of Pyramids and Cones ; fome new Properties of ...
... Cone and Sphere to the circumfcribing Cylinder ; the Figure of the 5 regular Bodies ; feveral Additions and Improve- ments in the Doctrine of Proportion : The Menfura- tion of the Fruftums of Pyramids and Cones ; fome new Properties of ...
Page 66
... Cone ; and the Circle is its Bafe . And a Line drawn from the Center e to a , is call'd its Axis . i 8. If a Line a b move uni- formly about two Polygons gfa and deb , which are every way equal , having their Sides and Angles mutually ...
... Cone ; and the Circle is its Bafe . And a Line drawn from the Center e to a , is call'd its Axis . i 8. If a Line a b move uni- formly about two Polygons gfa and deb , which are every way equal , having their Sides and Angles mutually ...
Page 69
... Cones cannot be found exactly ; but for Right Ones multiply the Circum- ference of the Bafe by half of the Side of the Cone , the Product is the Area of the Convex Surface . Be- cause the Curve Surface of a Cone is equal to a Tri ...
... Cones cannot be found exactly ; but for Right Ones multiply the Circum- ference of the Bafe by half of the Side of the Cone , the Product is the Area of the Convex Surface . Be- cause the Curve Surface of a Cone is equal to a Tri ...
Page 70
... Cone ; fuch a Fi- gure being capable of exactly covering it . III . For the Surface of the Sphere . Multiply the Diameter by the Periphery of any great Circle , or by fuch a Circle as hath the Diame- ter of the Sphere for its Diameter ...
... Cone ; fuch a Fi- gure being capable of exactly covering it . III . For the Surface of the Sphere . Multiply the Diameter by the Periphery of any great Circle , or by fuch a Circle as hath the Diame- ter of the Sphere for its Diameter ...
Page 72
... Cones , with equal Bafes and Heights , are equal . 32. Pyramids and Cones on equal Bafes , and of equal Heights with Prisms and Cylinders , are one third of fuch Prisms and Cylinders . In a Triangular Prifm and Pyramid of the fame Bafe ...
... Cones , with equal Bafes and Heights , are equal . 32. Pyramids and Cones on equal Bafes , and of equal Heights with Prisms and Cylinders , are one third of fuch Prisms and Cylinders . In a Triangular Prifm and Pyramid of the fame Bafe ...
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Short, But Yet Plain Elements of Geometry: Shewing How by a Brief an Easie ... Ignace Gaston Pardies No preview available - 2018 |
Short, But Yet Plain Elements of Geometry: Shewing How by a Brief an Easie ... Ignace Gaston Pardies No preview available - 2017 |
Common terms and phrases
alfo Baſe becauſe biffected call'd Center Chord Circle circumfcribed Circumference Compaffes Cone confequently Cylinder defcribe Demonftration Diameter Diſtance divided Divifion double draw drawn e band ELEMENTS OF GEOMETRY exprefs external Angle faid fame Bafe fame Parallels fhall be equal Figure fimilar Planes fince firft fome four Right ftand fuch fuppofe Geometry given Line greater half hath Height Hypothenufe infcribed interfecting laft leffer lefs Legs Line a b little Triangle Logarithms Lune mean Proportional meaſure muft multiplied muſt oppofite Parallelogram Parallelopipeds Perpendicular plane Number Pofition Point Polygon Prifms produced Progreffion Propofition Pyramid Quantity Radius Ratio Rectangle ac Rectangle Triangle refpect Right Angles Right Line Sector Segment Solid Solid Angle Sphere Square Surface thefe thofe thoſe tis called Trapezium Triangle abc triple Vertex Wherefore whofe Sides
Popular passages
Page 71 - Cone, v. hofc perpendicular Axis is the Radius of the Sphere, and its Bafe a Plain, equal to all the Surface of it. For you may conceive the Sphere to confift of an infinite Number of Cones, whofe Bafes, taken all together, compofe the Surface, and...
Page 82 - When any number of quantities are proportionals, as one antecedent is to its consequent, so is the sum of all the antecedents to the sum of all the consequents.
Page 57 - If a straight line be divided into any two parts, four times the rectangle contained by the whole line, and one of the parts, together with the square of the other part, is equal to the square of the straight line which is made up of the whole and that part.
Page 102 - The areas of two circles are to each other as the squares of their radii ; or, as the squares of their diameters.
Page 44 - A polygon is faid to be infcribed in a circle, when all its angles touch, or are in the circumference ; and circumfcribed, when all the fides touch the circle.
Page 49 - Principle being granted, which is in " a manner felf-evident, it may diredUy be prov'd, that the Triangle { before mentioned ) is equal to the Circle; becaufe every imaginable infcrib'd Figure, which is lefs than the Circle, is alfo lefs than the Triangle ; and every circumfcrib'd Figure, greater than the Circle, is alfo greater than the
Page 74 - C; or the Surface of the Sphere is equal to the curve Surface of the Cylinder, but the curve Surface of the Cylinder was 2 r c. Wherefore, to find the Area of the Surface of either Sphere or Cylinder, you muft multiply the Diameter ( — 2 r) by the Circumference of a great Circle of the Sphere, or by the Periphery of the Bafe. From* this Notation alfo — , the Area of a...
Page 61 - IN any Obtuse-angled Triangle, the Square of the Side subtending the Obtuse Angle, is Greater than the Sum of the Squares of the other two Sides, by Twice the Rectangle of the Base and the Distance of the Perpendicular from the Obtuse Angle. ( Let ABC be a triangle...
Page 42 - THE oppofite angles of any quadrilateral figure defcribed in a circle, are together equal to two right angles. Let ABCD be a quadrilateral figure in the circle ABCD ; any two of its oppofite angles are together equal to. two right angles. Join AC, BD ; and becaufe the three angles of every triangle are equal » to two right angles, the three angles of the triangle CAB, viz.
Page 84 - ... parallelograms match in length. It is then easy enough to show that we have a complete system of congruence for any one system of parallel stretches in space. This means that if there are any two stretches either on the same straight line or on parallel straight lines, we have a definitely determined numerical ratio of the length of one to the length of the other. But we cannot go further and compare the lengths of two stretches which are not parallel, unless we introduce some additional principle...