1 Circle is a perfectly rounded shape
2 Circumference of a circle is its perimeter
3 Chord is a straight line in a circle spanning its circumference
4 Circumscribe a polygon within a circle
5 Circumnavigate a sphere is to go around it
6 Cartesian plane was created by French mathematician Rene Descartes
7 Coordinates are plotted on the Cartesian plane
8 Cosine ratio of a right angle triangle is adjacent/hypotenuse
9 Cross-section area of a prism times its length is its volume
10 Cuboid is a 3 dimensional shape
11 Cube is a 3D shape with 6 equal square faces
12 Congruent shapes are identical
13 Cylinder has 2 equal opposite circular parallel bases
14 Cone has circular flat base tapering to its apex like a witch's hat
15 Complementary angles add up to 90 degrees
16 Corresponding angles are equal
17 C^2 = A^2 plus B^2 is Pythagoras' theorem for right angle triangles
18 Cyclic quadrilaterals have certain properties within in circles
19 Combined angle in a triangle add up to 180 degrees
20 Concentric circles share the same centre but with different radii
21 Collinear lines lie on the same straight line
quadrilateral
yeah but this is all i foundWedge- - part of a circle containing its center and an arcsource:http://library.thinkquest.org/2647/geometry/glossary.htm#b
well add
Do it!
Point, line and plane ARE terms from geometry.
quadrilateral
Basic geometry terms are lines, points segments and rays, so it should be "point".
There are Four building blocks of geometery. They are; theorems, postulates, definitions, and undefined terms. They are terms that prove statements in geometery. The undefined terms include a point, line and plane.
A = acute, adjacent, algebra, area, axis, ass!
yeah but this is all i foundWedge- - part of a circle containing its center and an arcsource:http://library.thinkquest.org/2647/geometry/glossary.htm#b
I've Heard of one "Justify"I Don't know the definition but it works
1. Undefined Terms 2. Definitions 3. Postulates 4. Conjectures 5. Theorems :)
well add
Trapezoid and triangle are geometry terms. They begin with T.
are you asking for help on finding definition for geometric terms? if so go to: http://library.thinkquest.org/2647/geometry/glossary.htm#b and to wikipedia for x and j terms
Do it!
The glossary section of a textbook provides definitions of key terms. This section is typically located at the end of the book and lists important terms along with their definitions for reference.