¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Equidistantly
1. [adv]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Equidistantly
Literary usage of Equidistantly
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Electric Railways, Theoretically and Practically Treated by John J D Keiley, Sydney Whitmore Ashe (1907)
"For instance, with a two-pole, three-phase machine, there are three taps spaced
equidistantly 120 electrical degrees apart; while, with a four-pole, ..."
2. The American Journal of Psychology by Granville Stanley Hall, Edward Bradford Titchener (1920)
"Our stimuli were ten white cards, about 25 cm. square, on which patterns of
equidistantly spaced figures, such as lines, squares, diamonds, were drawn in ..."
3. History of Indian and Eastern Architecture by James Fergusson (1899)
"disposed equidistantly, without any attempt at the octagonal dome of the ...
The porch, too, is open, and consists of columns spaced equidistantly over its ..."
4. A History of Architecture in All Countries: From the Earliest Times to the by James Fergusson (1876)
"disposed equidistantly, without any attempt at the octagonal dome of the ...
The porch, too, is open, and consists of columns spaced equidistantly over its ..."
5. The Operative Mechanic, and British Machinist: Being a Practical Display of by John Nicholson (1825)
"Queen-posts ; two upright pieces of timber, framed below into the tie-beam, and
above into the principal rafters ; placed equidistantly from the middle of ..."
6. Mathematical Geography by Willis Ernest Johnson (1907)
"Meridians are divided equidistantly by parallels, and parallels are divided
equidistantly by meridians. 3. When a pole is the center of the map, ..."
7. A Treatise on Surveying: Comprising the Theory and the Practice by William Mitchell Gillespie, Cady Staley (1897)
"Nearly all the larger instruments are read by means of the micrometer microscope,
three of them being placed equidistantly about the circle. ..."
8. A Treatise on Surveying: Comprising the Theory and the Practice by William Mitchell Gillespie (1897)
"Nearly all the larger instruments are read by means of the micrometer microscope,
three of them being placed equidistantly about the circle. ..."