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Definition of Coaxal
1. Adjective. Having a common axis.
Definition of Coaxal
1. coaxial [adj] - See also: coaxial
Lexicographical Neighbors of Coaxal
Literary usage of Coaxal
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. An Elementary Treatise on Modern Pure Geometry by Robert Lachlan (1893)
"Inversion applied to coaxal circles. 371. To illustrate the advantage of using
the method of inversion to prove propositions relating to geometrical figures ..."
2. The Elements of Coordinate Geometry by Sidney Luxton Loney (1896)
"coaxal Circles. Def. A system of circles is said to be coaxal when they have a
common radical axis, ie when the radical axis of each pair of circles of the ..."
3. A Treatise on Infinitesimal Calculus: Containing Differential and Integral by Bartholomew Price (1868)
"The resultant of many coaxal couples is a coaxal couple whose moment is equal to
the algebraical sum of the moments of the component couples. ..."
4. An Elementary Treatise on Pure Geometry with Numerous Examples by John Wellesley Russell (1905)
"The three circles on the diagonals of any quadrilateral as diameters are coaxal.
The three middle points of the diagonals of a quadrilateral lic on a line ..."
5. An Elementary Treatise on Pure Geometry: With Numerous Examples by John Wellesley Russell (1893)
"A system of coaxal circles is cut by any transversal in pairs of points in involution.
... A line touches two circles in A and A' and cuts a coaxal ..."
6. A Sequel to the First Six Books of the Elements of Euclid, Containing an by John Casey, Euclid (1904)
"If X, Y, Z be three coaxal circles, the tangents drawn from any point of Z to X
and Y are in a given ratio. (4). If tangents drawn from a variable point P ..."
7. A Treatise on the Analytical Geometry of the Point, Line, Circle, and Conic by John Casey (1893)
"If a quadrilateral AA'BB' be inscribed in a circle X, and if the diagonals AB,
A'B' touch a circle Y of a system coaxal with X, then the sides (Sequel to ..."