1

When I look up

'that which is right-angled but not equilateral'

there are translations that show the word before the above phrase to 'oblong', some that show 'rectangle' and some that show both with one term in brackets (1 2 3).

Why is this? Guesses:

  1. Translation error
  2. Euclid didn't consider squares to be rectangles.
  3. Euclid made a mistake.
  4. Other

Related:

In Korea, are squares considered rectangles?

Are kindergartners supposed to be steered from squares being rectangles?

In what curricula are “rectangles” defined so as to exclude squares?

Why do we have circles for ellipses, squares for rectangles but nothing for triangles?

What are/should kids (be) taught about the colour of the sun?

BCLC
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    Where did you find that phrase? Euclid's elements? – Arthur Mar 22 '18 at 07:26
  • Oblong is another word for a rectangle of length more than width. I for one would not make simple things more complicated than needed and expend time on it. – Narasimham Mar 22 '18 at 08:29
  • @Arthur Yes! Updated. Thanks. – BCLC Mar 22 '18 at 09:54
  • @Narasimham Relevance please? My question is why some texts give 'oblong' while others give 'rectangle' or even both words with one in round brackets. – BCLC Mar 22 '18 at 09:55
  • https://www.collinsdictionary.com/dictionary/english/oblong It has a Latin origin, old English, refers to the figure when one dimension is larger than the other. It is meant to specifically exclude the square in its subset reference, which is not the case for the rectangle. About round brackets please refer to explanation of notation in the index pages. – Narasimham Mar 22 '18 at 14:01
  • It was written in ancient Greek 3,000 years ago and math has developed a different rigor and vocabulary since and this question is irrelevant and pointless. If you have a question to ask then ask it and stop getting snippy with people giving relevant answers because but can't figure out what you are incapable of expressing. Some text translate as "oblong" and others as "rectangle" because some people chose to translate it that way. Why? Who knows? Who cares? What matters is how mathematicians choose to formalize their language. Which is precisely what Marasimham and Robert Israel did.
  • – fleablood Mar 22 '18 at 20:59
  • @fleablood re who cares: my employers insist squares are not rectangles where I am. Looks like all the kindergarten kids in our centre are going to continue to be taught A LIE unless I do something... – BCLC Mar 25 '18 at 14:46