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Geometric   /dʒˌiəmˈɛtrɪk/   Listen
adjective
Geometrical, Geometric  adj.  
1.
Pertaining to, or according to the rules or principles of, geometry; determined by geometry; as, a geometrical solution of a problem.
2.
(Art) Characterized by simple geometric forms in design and decoration; as, a buffalo hide painted with red and black geometrical designs.
Synonyms: geometric. Note: Geometric is often used, as opposed to algebraic, to include processes or solutions in which the propositions or principles of geometry are made use of rather than those of algebra. Note: Geometrical is often used in a limited or strictly technical sense, as opposed to mechanical; thus, a construction or solution is geometrical which can be made by ruler and compasses, i. e., by means of right lines and circles. Every construction or solution which requires any other curve, or such motion of a line or circle as would generate any other curve, is not geometrical, but mechanical. By another distinction, a geometrical solution is one obtained by the rules of geometry, or processes of analysis, and hence is exact; while a mechanical solution is one obtained by trial, by actual measurements, with instruments, etc., and is only approximate and empirical.
Geometrical curve. Same as Algebraic curve; so called because their different points may be constructed by the operations of elementary geometry.
Geometric lathe, an instrument for engraving bank notes, etc., with complicated patterns of interlacing lines; called also cycloidal engine.
Geometrical pace, a measure of five feet.
Geometric pen, an instrument for drawing geometric curves, in which the movements of a pen or pencil attached to a revolving arm of adjustable length may be indefinitely varied by changing the toothed wheels which give motion to the arm.
Geometrical plane (Persp.), the same as Ground plane.
Geometrical progression, Geometrical proportion, Geometrical ratio. See under Progression, Proportion and Ratio.
Geometrical radius, in gearing, the radius of the pitch circle of a cogwheel.
Geometric spider (Zool.), one of many species of spiders, which spin a geometrical web. They mostly belong to Epeira and allied genera, as the garden spider. See Garden spider.
Geometric square, a portable instrument in the form of a square frame for ascertaining distances and heights by measuring angles.
Geometrical staircase, one in which the stairs are supported by the wall at one end only.
Geometrical tracery, in architecture and decoration, tracery arranged in geometrical figures.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Geometric" Quotes from Famous Books



... the dollar and began to study it, turning it slowly round, counting the scratches this way and that, making geometric figures of them. Four heads peered over his shoulder as he worked silently ...
— The Secret Wireless - or, The Spy Hunt of the Camp Brady Patrol • Lewis E. Theiss

... be reproached with inaccuracy of expression,—since a line cannot be a point, and yet I apply to lines the name of decisive or objective points. It seems almost useless to remark that objective points are not geometric points, but that the name is a form of expression used to designate the object which an ...
— The Art of War • Baron Henri de Jomini

... where new residences are beginning to spring up, the eye is charmed by old brown houses roofed with red tiles, often standing tree-shaded in a bountiful flower garden, and always preserving their own lines of frontage and their own angle of gable, with delightful indifference to the geometric scale ...
— Faces and Places • Henry William Lucy

... modern practitioner. Any mysterious figure or letter was exceedingly helpful in the sick room of a thousand years ago. The Greek letters "Alpha" and "Omega" had reached England almost as soon as Christianity had, and the old-time doctor triumphantly used them in his pow-wows. Geometric figures in a handful of sand or seeds would prophesy the fate of the ills—and do we not to this day tell our fortune in the geometric figures made by the dregs in our tea-cups? Paternosters, snatches of Latin hymns, bits of ...
— Popular Science Monthly Volume 86

... whole families of veiled women and half-naked children were seated tailor fashion. On we spun, past the Zoo, past scattered villas of Frenchified, Oriental fashion which might have been designed by a confectioner: past azure lakes left by the ebbing Nile, and so into sudden dazzling sight of three geometric mountains in a tawny desert—two, monsters in size, and one a baby trying ...
— It Happened in Egypt • C. N. Williamson & A. M. Williamson


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