¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Medials
1. medial [n] - See also: medial
Lexicographical Neighbors of Medials
Literary usage of Medials
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Elements of Geometry by George Bruce Halsted (1885)
"Three or more points which lie on the same line are said to be Collinear* THEOREM
XXXVI. 235. The three medials of a triangle are concurrent in a trisection ..."
2. General Principles of the Structure of Language by James Byrne (1892)
"K The infection whereby tenues become medials and medials arv weakened or vocalised,
affects these consonants in the beginning of i word, where they suffer ..."
3. A Comparative Grammar of the Sanskrit, Zend, Greek, Latin, Lithuanian by Franz Bopp, Edward B. Eastwick (1845)
"... with certain limits, also to the Sanscrit and Zend, substitute aspirates for
the original tenues, A for k, th for t, and / for p; tenues for medials, ..."
4. Introductory Modern Geometry of Point, Ray, and Circle by William Benjamin Smith (1892)
"Draw a ray from C through O, the intersection of the two medials, and lay off
OH= CO. ... Hence COR is the third medial; ie the three medials pass through ..."
5. A Manual of Comparative Philology, in which the Affinity of the Indo by William Balfour Winning (1838)
"Upper German holds the same relation to Gothic, as this does to Greek, and uses
aspirates for the Gothic tenues and Greek medials; tenues for the Gothic ..."
6. A Manual of Comparative Philology: In which the Affinity of the Indo by William Balfour Winning (1838)
"Upper German holds the same relation to Gothic, as this does to Greek, and uses
aspirates for the Gothic tenues and Greek medials ; tenues for the Gothic ..."