(PDF) GEOMETRY | Guldariya Moldabaeva

Academia.edu no longer supports Internet Explorer.

To browse Academia.edu and the wider internet faster and more securely, please take a few seconds to upgrade your browser.

Academia.eduAcademia.eduLog InSign Up
  • Log In
  • Sign Up
  • more
    • About
    • Press
    • Papers
    • Terms
    • Privacy
    • Copyright
    • We're Hiring!
    • Help Center
    • less

Outline

keyboard_arrow_downTitleAbstractIntroductionObjectivesFirst page of “GEOMETRY”PDF Icondownload

Download Free PDF

Download Free PDFGEOMETRYProfile image of Guldariya MoldabaevaGuldariya Moldabaevavisibility

description

202 pages

descriptionSee full PDFdownloadDownload PDF bookmarkSave to LibraryshareShareclose

Sign up for access to the world's latest research

Sign up for freearrow_forwardcheckGet notified about relevant paperscheckSave papers to use in your researchcheckJoin the discussion with peerscheckTrack your impact

Abstract

After studying this section you will be able to:

... Read moreSee full PDFdownloadDownload PDFLoading...

Loading Preview

Sorry, preview is currently unavailable. You can download the paper by clicking the button above.

Related papers

Lines and AnglesAadhi Aadharsh

Fundamental concepts of Geometry: Point: It is an exact location. It is a fine dot which has neither length nor breadth nor thickness but has position i.e., it has no magnitude. Line segment: The straight path joining two points A and B is called a line segment AB. It has and points and a definite length. Ray: A line segment which can be extended in only one direction is called a ray. Intersecting lines: Two lines having a common point are called intersecting lines. The common point is known as the point of intersection. Concurrent lines: If two or more lines intersect at the same point, then they are known as concurrent lines. Angles: When two straight lines meet at a point they form an angle. In the figure above, the angle is represented as ∠AOB. OA and OB are the arms of ∠AOB. Point O is the vertex of ∠AOB. The amount of turning from one arm (OA) to other (OB) is called the measure of the angle (ÐAOB). Right angle: An angle whose measure is 90 o is called a right angle. Acute angle: An angle whose measure is less then one right angle (i.e., less than 90 o), is called an acute angle.

downloadDownload free PDFView PDFchevron_rightThe Geometry of Homological TrianglesFlorentin Smarandache

2012

downloadDownload free PDFView PDFchevron_right Academia
  • Explore
  • Papers
  • Topics
  • Features
  • Mentions
  • Analytics
  • PDF Packages
  • Advanced Search
  • Search Alerts
  • Journals
  • Academia.edu Journals
  • My submissions
  • Reviewer Hub
  • Why publish with us
  • Testimonials
  • Company
  • About
  • Careers
  • Press
  • Help Center
  • Terms
  • Privacy
  • Copyright
  • Content Policy
Academia580 California St., Suite 400San Francisco, CA, 94104© 2025 Academia. All rights reserved

Tag » Collinear Points Or Non Collinear Points Point B D A