Dictionary.com
Thesaurus.com
Showing results for trapezium. Search instead for trapezing.

trapezium

American  
[truh-pee-zee-uhm] / trəˈpi zi əm /

noun

plural

trapeziums, trapezia
  1. Geometry.

    1. (in Euclidean geometry) any rectilinear quadrilateral plane figure not a parallelogram.

    2. a quadrilateral plane figure of which no two sides are parallel.

    3. British. trapezoid.

  2. Anatomy. a bone in the wrist that articulates with the metacarpal bone of the thumb.


trapezium British  
/ trəˈpiːzɪəm /

noun

  1. Usual US and Canadian name: trapezoid.  a quadrilateral having two parallel sides of unequal length

  2. a quadrilateral having neither pair of sides parallel

  3. a small bone of the wrist near the base of the thumb

"Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged" 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

trapezium Scientific  
/ trə-pēzē-əm /

plural

trapeziums
  1. A four-sided plane figure having no parallel sides.


Other Word Forms

  • trapezial adjective

Etymology

Origin of trapezium

1545–55; < New Latin < Greek trapézion kind of quadrilateral, literally, small table, equivalent to trápez ( a ) table (shortening of *tetrapeza object having four feet, equivalent to tetra- four + péza foot, akin to poús, podós; tetra-, foot ) + -ion diminutive suffix

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

In a series of 8½ -by-11 drawings, the artist brings out circles and semicircles as well as squares and a trapezium.

From Washington Post

Plans also call for an indoor trapeze center, which the school says would be the only trapezium in the country.

From Washington Times

Plus some work on shape, so “boys, this is a trapezium”, and the like.

From The Guardian

Sometimes, however, in certain varieties of horses the trapezium is developed, but then it is no more than a very small osseous nodule.

From Project Gutenberg

And let all quadrilaterals other than these be called trapezia.

From Project Gutenberg