English

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Noun

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tangence (countable and uncountable, plural tangences)

  1. Alternative form of tangency
    • 1874, L J V. Gerard, The elements of geometry, in eight books; or, First step in applied logic, page 106:
      The points of intangence, or extangence, of two circumferences are the points of tangence of their intangents, or extangents.
    • 1957, Canadin Patent Office, The Canadian Patent Office Record and Register of Copyrights, volume 85, numbers 10-12, page 8721:
      [] to assure the belt passes only through said points of tangence, [] .
    • 2006, ACM Symposium on Solid and Physical Modeling: Proceedings, page 185:
      The latter enables designers and engineers to describe geometric entities (points, lines, planes, curves, surfaces) by specification of constraints: distances, angles, incidences, tangences between geometric entities.

References

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French

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Pronunciation

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  • Audio:(file)

Noun

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tangence f (plural tangences)

  1. tangency

Further reading

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