In branches of mathematics dealing with set theory, an element is sometimes referred to as a point. to direct (the finger, a weapon, the attention, etc.) It was at that point that I told him he'd said enough. ), http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Point_(geometry)&oldid=497200013, De Laguna, T., 1922, "Point, line and surface as sets of solids,". A route is the shortest connection between two points. Therefore, it is not possible for any F-35 schedule to include a video data link  or infrared pointer at this point.

© William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Point_(geometry)&oldid=6741977, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License, not coincident = they are not one and the same. coordinate geometry, plane geometry, solid geometry, geochemistry. We usually represent a point by a small cross 'X' or by a small dot (a small, round shape).

The mathematics of the properties, measurement, and relationships of points, lines, angles, surfaces, and solids. Powerful Congressman Writes About ‘Fleshy Breasts’. Most English definitions are provided by WordNet . That’s the only kind of endurance I’m going to cosign for at this point. It has no size, only position.

His book subject is quite good, but he tends to miss the forest for the trees.

There are approximately 72 points to the inch, a unit of value used to quote security and commodity prices and their fluctuations, a percentage unit sometimes payable by a borrower as a premium on a loan, one of the 32 marks on the circumference of a compass card indicating direction, the angle of 11°15′ between two adjacent marks, a point on the horizon indicated by such a mark, a fielding position at right angles to the batsman on the off side and relatively near the pitch, any of the numbers cast in the first throw in craps with which one neither wins nor loses by throwing them: 4, 5, 6, 8, 9, or 10, either of the two electrical contacts that make or break the current flow in the distributor of an internal-combustion engine, a junction of railway tracks in which a pair of rails can be moved so that a train can be directed onto either of two lines, a piece of ribbon, cord, etc, with metal tags at the end: used during the 16th and 17th centuries to fasten clothing, an aggressive position adopted in bayonet or sword drill, the position at the head of a body of troops, or a person in this position, the position of the body of a pointer or setter when it discovers game, a mark awarded for a scoring blow, knockdown, etc, any diacritic used in a writing system, esp in a phonetic transcription, to indicate modifications of vowels or consonants, the position just inside the opponents' blue line, a specific, appropriate, or relevant instance or example, to do (something) because one thinks it important, at the moment immediately before a specified condition, action, etc, is expected to begin, to gain an advantage at someone else's expense, to make a concession or exception not usually made, to indicate the location or direction of by or as by extending (a finger or other pointed object) towards it, to indicate or identify a specific person or thing among several, all evidence pointed to Donald as the murderer, to direct or cause to go or face in a specific direction or towards a place or goal, (of gun dogs) to indicate the place where game is lying by standing rigidly with the muzzle turned in its direction, to finish or repair the joints of (brickwork, masonry, etc) with mortar or cement, to mark (a psalm text) with vertical lines to indicate the points at which the music changes during chanting, to steer (a sailing vessel) close to the wind or (of a sailing vessel) to sail close to the wind, to provide (a letter or letters) with diacritics, to provide (a Hebrew or similar text) with vowel points.