Page:The Algebra of Mohammed Ben Musa (1831).djvu/94

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this: if you multiply every one of its two short sides by itself, and add the products, their sum is more than the long side alone multiplied by itself. The definition of the obtuse-angled triangle is this: if you multiply its two short sides each by itself, and then add the products, their sum is less than the product of the long side multiplied by itself.

The rectangular triangle has two cathetes and an hypotenuse. It may be considered as the moiety of a quadrangle. You find its area by multiplying one of its cathetes by the moiety of the other. The product is the area.

Examples.—A rectangular triangle; one cathete being (58) six yards, the other eight, and the hypotenuse ten. You make the computation by multiplying six by four: this gives twenty-four, which is the area. Or if you prefer, you may also calculate it by the height, which rises perpendicularly from the longest side of it: for the two short sides may themselves be considered as two heights. If you prefer this, you multiply the height by the moiety of the basis. The product is the area. This is the figure:

Second kind.—An equilateral triangle with acute angles, every side of which is ten yards long. Its area