The elements of Euclid, in which the propositions are demonstrated in a new and shorter manner than in former translations, and the Arrangement of many of them altered, To which are annexed Plain and Spherical Trigonometry, tables of Logarithms from 1 to 10000, and Tables of Sines, Tangents, and Secants, both Natural and Artificial. By George Douglas, Teacher of Mathematics in the Academy at Ayr.

  • Euclid.
Date:
M.DCC.LXXVI. [1776]
  • Books
  • Online

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About this work

Also known as

Elements. Selections. English

Publication/Creation

London : printed for J. Murray, No. 32. Fleetstreet; and C. Elliot, Parliament-Square, Edinburgh, M.DCC.LXXVI. [1776]

Physical description

xii,172,92p.,plates : ill. ; 80.

Contributors

References note

ESTC N31562

Reproduction note

Electronic reproduction. Farmington Hills, Mich. : Thomson Gale, 2003. (Eighteenth century collections online). Available via the World Wide Web. Access limited by licensing agreements.

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