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Word Meanings - INCENTER - Book Publishers vocabulary database

The center of the circle inscribed in a triangle.

Related words: (words related to INCENTER)

  • CIRCLED
    Having the form of a circle; round. "Monthly changes in her circled orb." Shak.
  • TRIANGLE
    A figure bounded by three lines, and containing three angles. Note: A triangle is either plane, spherical, or curvilinear, according as its sides are straight lines, or arcs of great circles of a sphere, or any curved lines whatever. A
  • CENTERING
    See 6
  • CENTERBIT; CENTREBIT
    An instrument turning on a center, for boring holes. See Bit, n., 3.
  • CENTERBOARD; CENTREBOARD
    A movable or sliding keel formed of a broad board or slab of wood or metal which may be raised into a water-tight case amidships, when in shallow water, or may be lowered to increase the area of lateral resistance and prevent leeway when the vessel
  • CIRCLET
    1. A little circle; esp., an ornament for the person, having the form of a circle; that which encircles, as a ring, a bracelet, or a headband. Her fair locks in circlet be enrolled. Spenser. 2. A round body; an orb. Pope. Fairest of stars . . .
  • CENTERPIECE; CENTREPIECE
    An ornament to be placed in the center, as of a table, ceiling, atc.; a central article or figure.
  • INSCRIBABLE
    Capable of being inscribed, -- used specif. of solids or plane figures capable of being inscribed in other solids or figures.
  • CIRCLER
    A mean or inferior poet, perhaps from his habit of wandering around as a stroller; an itinerant poet. Also, a name given to the cyclic poets. See under Cyclic, a. B. Jonson.
  • INSCRIBABLENESS
    Quality of being inscribable.
  • CENTER; CENTRE
    1. To be placed in a center; to be central. 2. To be collected to a point; to be concentrated; to rest on, or gather about, as a center. Where there is no visible truth wherein to center, error is as wide as men's fancies. Dr. H. More. Our hopes
  • CENTERFIRE CARTRIDGE
    See CARTRIDGE
  • TRIANGLED
    Having three angles; triangular.
  • CIRCLE
    An instrument of observation, the graduated limb of which consists of an entire circle. Note: When it is fixed to a wall in an observatory, it is called a mural circle; when mounted with a telescope on an axis and in Y's, in the plane
  • CENTER
    A temporary structure upon which the materials of a vault or arch are supported in position util the work becomes self-supporting. One of the two conical steel pins, in a lathe, etc., upon which the work is held, and about which it revolves.
  • INSCRIBE
    To draw within so as to meet yet not cut the boundaries. Note: A line is inscribed in a circle, or in a sphere, when its two ends are in the circumference of the circle, or in the surface of the sphere. A triangle is inscribed in another triangle,
  • INSCRIBER
    One who inscribes. Pownall.
  • CONCENTER; CONCENTRE
    To come to one point; to meet in, or converge toward, a common center; to have a common center. God, in whom all perfections concenter. Bp. Beveridge.
  • SELF-CENTERING; SELF-CENTRING
    Centering in one's self.
  • INCIRCLE
    See ENCIRCLE
  • PARQUET CIRCLE
    That part of the lower floor of a theater with seats at the rear of the parquet and beneath the galleries; -- called also, esp. in U. S., orchestra circle or parterre.
  • SELF-CENTERED; SELF-CENTRED
    Centered in itself, or in one's self. There hangs the ball of earth and water mixt, Self-centered and unmoved. Dryden.
  • DRESS CIRCLE
    A gallery or circle in a theater, generally the first above the floor, in which originally dress clothes were customarily worn.
  • ENCIRCLE
    To form a circle about; to inclose within a circle or ring; to surround; as, to encircle one in the arms; the army encircled the city. Her brows encircled with his serpent rod. Parnell. Syn. -- To encompass; surround; environ; inclose.
  • ORTHOCENTER
    That point in which the three perpendiculars let fall from the angles of a triangle upon the opposite sides, or the sides produced, mutually intersect.
  • CIRCUMCENTER
    The center of a circle that circumscribes a triangle.

 

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