Citations:hectohedron

English citations of hectohedron

  • 1882, Frank Leslie's Illustrated Family Almanac, page 30:
    It is hectohedron, and has only one small black spot near one of its points, thus enabling it to be seen to great advantage
  • 1936, Christian Alban Ruckmick, The Psychology of Feeling and Emotion, pages 83–84:
    But anyone familiar with a similar diagram, like the visual hectohedron, which portrays the elementary sensory experiences, notices at once that the temporal course of the affective process, a continuous change with time, is a new arrival on the scene, and that its mere reference to a pole or to several of them instead of a definite locus in the system is a new systematic feature.
  • 2000, Bridge to 21st Century Electron Microscopy, page 213:
    The relation of Xe spots to Ar spots in the SAD pattern and the shape of a truncated hectohedron of Xe precipitates surrounded by {111} and {100} planes indicate that the present results are consistent with former reports [12–14].
  • 2012, Nagaru Tanigawa, The Boredom of Haruhi Suzumiya:
    You could apply this formula to any polyhedron up to a hectohedron with a hundred faces and the answer will always be two.
  • 2023, Efraín Soto Apolinar, Illustrated Glossary for School Mathematics, page 353:
    100: hectahedron (also hectohedron.