13 Metaphors for triangle

The first word is a pun on the title, the second refers to his lordship's oratory, a triangle being the most feeble, monotonous, and unmusical of all musical instruments.

\ / \ /[Yod]\ / \ - the triangle itself being a symbol of Deity.

He that needs a probation to convince him that two are not three, that white is not black, that a triangle is not a circle, &c., or

To which we finally answer, because a triangle is a right-lined figure.

Thus if we desire to know why the outward angles of a triangle are equal to four right angles, and it is answered, Because the triangle is isosceles; we again ask, but why Because isosceles?

The outline of the first was that of a rude, and of course an irregular triangle, the three principal points of which were the two low capes already mentioned, and a third that lay to the northward and westward.

The first long-waved line was the river itself; the three short-waved lines were the arm of the river and the two pools; the three snakes were the three winding roads; the two triangles representing the letter #A# were the two high-roofed round houses; the heart was the rock!

"Here is a triangle," he said; "that triangle is New York province.

Q. Can an acute triangle be an equi-lateral triangle?

The African-European-Asian triangle was a meeting place and a battle ground.

As everyone in the mountain-desert knows, the Three B's are Bender, Buckskin, and Brownsville; they make the points of a loose triangle that is cut with canyons and tumbled with mountains, and that triangle was the chosen stamping ground of Jerry Strann.

Q. Can a right-angled triangle, or an obtuse-angled triangle, be an equilateral?

In the higher degrees of Masonry, the triangle is the most important of all symbols, and most generally assumes the name of the Delta, in allusion to the fourth letter of the Greek alphabet, which is of the same form and bears that appellation.

13 Metaphors for  triangle