Euclidean geometry: Difference between revisions
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imported>Ro Thorpe (a fish called Euclid) |
imported>Miguel Adérito Trigueira (added with link to parallel) |
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Line 13: | Line 13: | ||
*[[rectilinear angle (geometry)|rectilinear angle]] | *[[rectilinear angle (geometry)|rectilinear angle]] | ||
*[[right angle (geometry)|right angle]] | *[[right angle (geometry)|right angle]] | ||
*[[parallel (geometry)|parallel]] | |||
*[[perpendicular (geometry)|perpendicular]] | *[[perpendicular (geometry)|perpendicular]] | ||
*[[obtuse angle (geometry)|obtuse angle]] | *[[obtuse angle (geometry)|obtuse angle]] |
Revision as of 10:26, 14 August 2008
Euclidean geometry is a form of geometry first codified by Euclid in his series of thirteen books, The Elements.
Some of the concepts used and described in Euclidean geometry are:
- point
- line
- surface
- straight line
- plane
- plane angle
- rectilinear angle
- right angle
- parallel
- perpendicular
- obtuse angle
- acute angle
- boundary
- figure
- circle
- center
- diameter
- semicircle
- rectilinear figure
- trilateral
- quadrilateral
- multilateral
- equilateral triangle
- isoscelese triangle
- scalene triangle
- right angled triangle
- obtuse angled triangle
- acute angle triangle
- equilateral
- right angle
- square
- oblong
- rhombus
- rhomboid
- trapezia