What is the meaning of EUCL. Phrases containing EUCL
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Atmospheric Research Center
European Cooperation For The Long Term In Defense
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Acronyms & AI meanings
Association for Great Lakes Maritime History
Automated Bond System
Internal Data Base
Yellowstone City-County Health Department
Cable in the Classroom
Branson High School
Incarcerated Mentally Ill Task Force
Turkish National Intelligence Organization
Monte Carlo plus quench
Working Capital Demand Loan
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v.
A mathematical point; -- regularly used in old English translations of Euclid.
n.
A brittle gem occurring in light green, transparent crystals, affording a brilliant clinodiagonal cleavage. It is a silicate of alumina and glucina.
n.
A Greek geometer of the 3d century b. c.; also, his treatise on geometry, and hence, the principles of geometry, in general.
n.
The surface of constant negative curvature generated by the revolution of a tractrix. This surface corresponds in non-Euclidian space to the sphere in ordinary space. An important property of the surface is that any figure drawn upon it can be displaced in any way without tearing it or altering in size any of its elements.
a.
Flat; even; -- a term applied to surfaces and to spaces, whether real or imagined, in which the definitions, axioms, and postulates of Euclid respecting parallel straight lines are assumed to hold true.
n.
A rare metallic element, of a silver white color, and low specific gravity (2.1), resembling magnesium. It never occurs naturally in the free state, but is always combined, usually with silica or alumina, or both; as in the minerals phenacite, chrysoberyl, beryl or emerald, euclase, and danalite. It was named from its oxide glucina, which was known long before the element was isolated. Symbol Gl. Atomic weight 9.1. Called also beryllium.
v. t.
To have just and adequate ideas of; to apprehended the meaning or intention of; to have knowledge of; to comprehend; to know; as, to understand a problem in Euclid; to understand a proposition or a declaration; the court understands the advocate or his argument; to understand the sacred oracles; to understand a nod or a wink.
n.
Related to Euclid, or to the geometry of Euclid.
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