| Association for the improvement of geometrical teaching - 1876 - 66 páginas
...finite straight line has one and only one point of bisection. POSTULATES. Let it be granted that 1. A straight line may be drawn from any one point to any other point. 2. A terminated straight line may be produced to any length in a straight line. 3. A circle may be described... | |
| Richard Wormell - 1876 - 268 páginas
...point of bisection. 3. An angle has one and only one bisector. POSTULATES. Let it be granted that 1. A straight line may be drawn from any one point to any other point. 2. A terminated straight line may be produced to any length in a straight line. 3. A circle may be described... | |
| Elias Loomis - 1877 - 458 páginas
...into three equal parts ; to find two mean proportionals between two given lines, etc. Postulates. 1. A straight line may be drawn from any one point to any other point. 2. A terminated straight line may be produced to any length in a straight line. 3. From the greater of... | |
| George Albert Wentworth - 1877 - 436 páginas
...to all its parts taken together. 47. POSTULATES. Let it be granted — 1. That a straight line can be drawn from any one point to any other point. 2. That a straight line can be produced to any distance, or can be terminated at any point. 3. That the circumference... | |
| James Maurice Wilson - 1878 - 450 páginas
...point of bisection. 4. An angle has one and only one bisector. POSTULATES. Let it be granted that i. A straight line may be drawn from any one point to any other point. 2. A terminated straight line may be produced to any length in a straight line. 3. A circle may be described... | |
| Thomas Hunter - 1878 - 142 páginas
...12. Two straight lines which intersect each other can not both be parallel to the same straight line. Postulates. 1. Let it be granted that a straight line may be drawn from one point to another; 3. And that a circle may be described from any point as centre, and with any... | |
| Isaac Sharpless - 1879 - 282 páginas
...is the sum of the lines which, bound it. The perimeter of a circle is its circumference. Postu1ates. 1. Let it be granted that a straight line may be drawn from any point to any other point; 2. That a terminated straight line may be produced to any length in a straight... | |
| Euclides, Frederick Burn Harvey - 1880 - 178 páginas
...STRAIGHT LINES are such as are in the same plane, and which, being continually produced, never meet. POSTULATES. 1. Let it be granted that a straight line...may be drawn from any one point to any other point. That a terminated straight line may be produced to any length in a straight line. 3. That a circle... | |
| 1880 - 790 páginas
...has its centre everywhere and its circumference nowhere. Let it be granted, says the first postulate, that a straight line may be drawn from any one point to any other point ; the second says, let it be granted that any finite line may be produced to any distance in the same... | |
| George Albert Wentworth - 1881 - 266 páginas
...to all its parts taken together. 47. POSTULATES. Let it be granted — 1. That a straight line can be drawn from any one point to any other point. 2. That a straight line can be produced to any distance, or can be terminated at any point. 3. That the circumference... | |
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