Definition of Tangental

1. a. Tangential.

Definition of Tangental

1. Adjective. (misspelling of tangential) ¹

¹ Source: wiktionary.com

Definition of Tangental

1. [adj]

Medical Definition of Tangental

1. Tangential. Source: Websters Dictionary (01 Mar 1998)

Lexicographical Neighbors of Tangental

tanga
tangalung
tangas
tanged
tangelo
tangelo tree
tangelos
tangence
tangences
tangencies
tangency
tangent
tangent plane
tangent screen
tangental
tangential
tangential wound
tangentiality
tangentially
tangents
tangerine
tangerine tree
tangerines
tangeritin
tangfish
tanghin
tanghinia
tanghins
tangi

Literary usage of Tangental

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. A Complete Treatise on Practical Land-surveying, in All Its Departments by Anthony Nesbit (1847)
"The radius CX B, and tangental point B may be found mechanically, i. ... When the tangental points and one of the radii of the Serpentine Curve are given, ..."

2. Graphical Determination of Forces in Engineering Structures by James B. Chalmers (1881)
"these extreme rays are necessarily tangental to the cord polygon at the points 3 and ... 116/), and then we have a cord polygon necessarily tangental to the ..."

3. Graphical Determination of Forces in Engineering Structures by James B. Chalmers (1881)
"these extreme rays are necessarily tangental to the cord polygon at the points 3 and ... 116/), and then we have a cord polygon necessarily tangental to the ..."

4. A Rudimentary Treatise on Land and Engineering Surveying: For Students and by Thomas Baker, J.R. Young (1891)
"Otherwise, moving the instrument to V instead of U, sight back to U, and lay off first the exterior angle PVW equal to double the tangental angle (P being ..."

5. The Proceedings of the Linnean Society of New South Wales by Linnean Society of New South Wales (1886)
"In that case the tangental fibres are much thicker and extend from one main fibre to the other; the radial ones 2-8 times as the thin and vertical on the ..."

6. What is Vital Force?: Or, A Short and Comprehensive Sketch, Including Vital by Richard Fawcett Battye (1877)
"That it is viewed as the antagonism of an active to a passive force which determines the earth's orbit, and that that force is the tangental ..."

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