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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Elementary geometry

Geometry \Ge*om"e*try\, n.; pl. Geometries[F. g['e]om['e]trie, L. geometria, fr. Gr. ?, fr. ? to measure land; ge`a, gh^, the earth + ? to measure. So called because one of its earliest and most important applications was to the measurement of the earth's surface. See Geometer.]

  1. That branch of mathematics which investigates the relations, properties, and measurement of solids, surfaces, lines, and angles; the science which treats of the properties and relations of magnitudes; the science of the relations of space.

  2. A treatise on this science.

    Analytical geometry, or Co["o]rdinate geometry, that branch of mathematical analysis which has for its object the analytical investigation of the relations and properties of geometrical magnitudes.

    Descriptive geometry, that part of geometry which treats of the graphic solution of all problems involving three dimensions.

    Elementary geometry, that part of geometry which treats of the simple properties of straight lines, circles, plane surface, solids bounded by plane surfaces, the sphere, the cylinder, and the right cone.

    Higher geometry, that pert of geometry which treats of those properties of straight lines, circles, etc., which are less simple in their relations, and of curves and surfaces of the second and higher degrees.

WordNet
elementary geometry

n. geometry based on Euclid's axioms: e.g., only one line can be drawn through a point parallel to another line [syn: parabolic geometry, Euclidean geometry]

Usage examples of "elementary geometry".

But lines and angles make the sum of elementary geometry, a branch of Pure Mathematics: and the direction of the bombs, balls, and other projectiles, the necessary appendages of military works, altho' no part of their architecture, belong to the conic sections, a branch of transcendental geometry.

Diderot and Dalembert therefore, in their Arbor scientiae, have placed military architecture in the department of elementary geometry.

Ta-hoding the sailor had an excellent grasp of elementary geometry, not to mention the physical capabilities of his crew.