
Swedish: triangel (sv) c, trekant (sv) c, trehörning (sv) c. Scottish Gaelic: trì-cheàrnag f, trì-oinnsinneach m, trì-oisinneag f, triantan mĬyrillic: тро̏кӯт m ( Croatia ), троугао m Roman: trȍkūt (sh) m ( Croatia ), trougao m. Romagnol: please add this translation if you can. Rohingya: please add this translation if you can. Navajo: tááʼgóó yistłʼah, táaʼgo heetsʼóóz, táaʼgo deezʼá, tááʼgóó adeezʼáīokmål: trekant (no) m Nynorsk: trekant m. Ladin: please add this translation if you can. German: Dreieck (de) n Rhine Franconian: (please verify) Draiegg ( Palatine ). ( historical, usually in the plural ) A frame formed of three poles stuck in the ground and united at the top, to which people were bound when undergoing corporal punishment. A draughtsman's square in the form of a right-angled triangle. ( systemics ) The structure of systems composed with three interrelated objects. One of the writers' most pleasing inventions was to treat the triangle love story as comedy. 461 (Volume LIII, Number 11), Quadrant Magazine Limited, page 104:
2009, Neil McDonald, Quadrant, November 2009, No.( cue sports ) A triangular piece of equipment used for gathering the balls into the formation required by the game being played.It is suspended from a string and hit with a metal bar to make a resonant sound. ( music ) A percussion instrument made by forming a metal rod into a triangular shape which is open at one angle.
The wedge-shaped character was the triangle, the archaic Paleolithic sign of the vulva the pubic triangle was at the end of the phallic stylus. ( geometry ) A polygon with three sides and three angles.Etymology PIE wordįrom Middle English triangle, from Old French triangle, from Latin triangulum, noun use of adjective triangulus ( “ three-cornered, having three angles ” ), from trēs ( “ three ” ) + angulus ( “ corner, angle ” ). The triangles, a whipping post formed by three poles. English A regular triangle, the geometric shape.