There is nothing in particular that makes the Asian triangle Asian. The name is misleading: in fact, most Asian triangles, along with most other shapes in Euclidean Geometry, lack any nationality at all. They exist as imaginary entities, representative of Geometrical concepts that can only be imitated in the real world. This being the case, a pure Asian triangle is defined as follows:
* It is a closed trilateral
* It has two parallel sides
* Of these parallel sides, one is shorter than the other
* It looks Asian
Attributes | Values |
---|
rdfs:label
| |
rdfs:comment
| - There is nothing in particular that makes the Asian triangle Asian. The name is misleading: in fact, most Asian triangles, along with most other shapes in Euclidean Geometry, lack any nationality at all. They exist as imaginary entities, representative of Geometrical concepts that can only be imitated in the real world. This being the case, a pure Asian triangle is defined as follows:
* It is a closed trilateral
* It has two parallel sides
* Of these parallel sides, one is shorter than the other
* It looks Asian
|
dcterms:subject
| |
abstract
| - There is nothing in particular that makes the Asian triangle Asian. The name is misleading: in fact, most Asian triangles, along with most other shapes in Euclidean Geometry, lack any nationality at all. They exist as imaginary entities, representative of Geometrical concepts that can only be imitated in the real world. This being the case, a pure Asian triangle is defined as follows:
* It is a closed trilateral
* It has two parallel sides
* Of these parallel sides, one is shorter than the other
* It looks Asian One notable exception to the rule is the "part-Asian" triangle. The rules describing a part-Asian triangle are:
* It is a closed trilateral
* It has two parallel sides
* Of these parallel sides, one is shorter than the other
* It looks a little Asian
|