¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Tetragrams
1. tetragram [n] - See also: tetragram
Lexicographical Neighbors of Tetragrams
Literary usage of Tetragrams
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Mathematical Questions and Solutions by W. J. C. Miller (1871)
"... circumscribing the triangles formed by 4 lines meet in a point, and that the
points so belonging to the 5 tetragrams formed by 5 lines lie in a circle. ..."
2. An Elementary Treatise on Modern Pure Geometry by Robert Lachlan (1893)
"If five tetragrams be formed by excluding in succession each of five given lines,
show that the five lines which bisect the diagonals of these ..."
3. Chapters on the Modern Geometry of the Point, Line, and Circle: Being the by Richard Townsend (1865)
"... inscribed and of tetragrams ex- scribed to circles, the general properties
established for all ..."
4. The Message from the King's Coffer by Ronald Temple (1920)
"This sameness of the Female figures in both tetragrams of any one word, however,
is the reason for the symbolic mythology of Egyptian Masonry. ..."
5. The Encyclopaedia Britannica: A Dictionary of Arts, Sciences and General (1890)
"... t.;'- cially the Renaissance, introduced new subtleties into th« u" logical
branch of alchemy — tetragrams, ..."
6. The Encyclopaedia Britannica: A Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, and General by Thomas Spencer Baynes (1888)
"... analogous direction, medievalism, and more especially the Renaissance, introduced
new subtleties into the astrological branch of alchemy — tetragrams, ..."
7. Unicorns by James Huneker (1917)
"Spheres, planes, cones, circles, spirals, tetragrams, pentagrams, ellipses, and
what-not. A cubistic universe. Xenophanes said that God is a sphere. ..."
8. Unicorns by James Huneker (1917)
"Spheres, planes, cones, circles, spirals, tetragrams, pentagrams, ellipses, and
what-not. A cubistic universe. Xenophanes said that God is a sphere. ..."