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Lines and Angles
Lines and Angles

Fermat`s Last Theorem - Math @ McMaster University
Fermat`s Last Theorem - Math @ McMaster University

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... Enduring Understanding: Apply special relationships about interior and exterior angles of triangles, identify corresponding parts of congruent triangles and prove triangles congruent, learn about the special properties of isosceles and equilateral triangles. ...
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Unit 5, Activity 2, Investigating Congruence

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... A Polygon is a closed figure with intersecting lines forming vertices. The line segments form sides of polygons. They do not cross over or extend beyond the vertices. The simplest of Polygons is a triangle with only three sides. Polygons can have any number of sides. A Polygon with infinite number o ...
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Chapter 7 Work program

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Geometry Vocabulary Similarity, Congruence, and Proofs

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pages 278-285

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Lectures in Discrete Differential Geometry 3

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Chapter 3 Review

< 1 ... 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 ... 648 >

History of trigonometry

Early study of triangles can be traced to the 2nd millennium BC, in Egyptian mathematics (Rhind Mathematical Papyrus) and Babylonian mathematics.Systematic study of trigonometric functions began in Hellenistic mathematics, reaching India as part of Hellenistic astronomy. In Indian astronomy, the study of trigonometric functions flowered in the Gupta period, especially due to Aryabhata (6th century CE). During the Middle Ages, the study of trigonometry continued in Islamic mathematics, hence it was adopted as a separate subject in the Latin West beginning in the Renaissance with Regiomontanus.The development of modern trigonometry shifted during the western Age of Enlightenment, beginning with 17th-century mathematics (Isaac Newton and James Stirling) and reaching its modern form with Leonhard Euler (1748).
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