trapezium

listen to the pronunciation of trapezium
English - Turkish
yamuk

Bazı önemli geometrik şekiller üçgen, kare, dikdörtgen, daire, paralelkenar ve ikizkenar yamuktur. - Some important geometric shapes are the triangle, the square, the rectangle, the circle, the parallelogram and the trapezium.

{i} ikizkenar yamuk [amer.]
geom

Bazı önemli geometrik şekiller üçgen, kare, dikdörtgen, daire, paralelkenar ve ikizkenar yamuktur. - Some important geometric shapes are the triangle, the square, the rectangle, the circle, the parallelogram and the trapezium.

(Tıp) Pons'un aşağı kısmında görülen enine traktus
{i} trapez kemiği
(Tıp) Trapez (yamuk) kemik, os trapezium
ikizkenar yamuk
trapezium distortion
trapez distorsiyonu, yamuk distorsiyonu
isosceles trapezium
(Geometri) ikizkenar yamuk
English - English
A four-sided polygon with two sides parallel; a trapezoid (modern sense)
A region on the ventral side of the brain, either just back of the pons Varolii, or, as in man, covered by the posterior extension of its transverse fibers
A four-sided polygon with no parallel sides and no sides equal; a simple convex irregular quadrilateral
A bone of the carpus at the base of the first metacarpal, or thumb
{n} a figure bounded by four unequal right lines
A plane figure bounded by four right lines, of which no two are parallel
A four-sided polygon with no two sides parallel and no equal sides; an irregular quadrilateral
A four-sided polygon with two non-adjacent parallel sides; a trapezoid (modern meaning)
- Quadrilateral with no parallel sides
a multiple star in the constellation of Orion
A quadrilateral in which no sides are parallel
the wrist bone on the thumb side of the hand that articulates with the 1st and 2nd metacarpals
a quadrilateral with no parallel sides
the wrist bone on the thumb side of the hand that articulates with the 1st and 2nd metacarpals a multiple star in the constellation of Orion a quadrilateral with no parallel sides
{i} four-sided figure which has no parallel sides; bone in the wrist
A trapezium
trapeze
trapezium

    Hyphenation

    tra·pe·zi·um

    Pronunciation

    Etymology

    () Recorded since 1570, from Late Latin trapezium, from Ancient Greek τραπέζιον (“irregular quadrilateral”, literally “a little table”), diminutive of τράπεζα (“table”)", itself from τρά- (“four”) + πέζα (“foot, edge”).
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