Euclid's Elements Book 1: Proposition 21
This is the twenty first proposition in Euclid's first book of The Elements. This proof shows that if you draw two lines meeting at a point within a triangle, those two lines added together will be smaller than the two sides of the original triangle added together. Also the angle formed by the two straight lines will be bigger than the angle formed by the two lines of the original triangle.

▶︎
Euclid's Elements Book 1: Proposition 22, Constructing A Triangle

▶︎
Euclid's Elements Book 1: Proposition 24

▶︎
Euclid's Elements Book 1, Proposition 21

▶︎
Kevin Spacey Breaks Down The Game Theory | 21

▶︎
Euclid's Elements: Common Notions

▶︎
Penny Helps Sheldon Solve His Equation | The Big Bang Theory

▶︎
What Death Row Looks Like Around the World

▶︎
Mr.Bean Making Celebrities Cry With Laughter NONSTOP!

▶︎
US Marines VS Climbers - Who is Stronger?

▶︎
I Investigated The World's Skinniest vs Fattest City

▶︎
Euclid's Elements Book 1: Proposition 35, Parallelogram Area

▶︎
Rowan Atkinson's Funniest Moments That Prove He's a Comedy Genius

▶︎
Euclid Elements -- Introduction 1.0

▶︎
WHO IS STRONGER? Anatoly VS Bodybuilder | Pretended to be a CLEANER

▶︎
Euclid's Elements Book 1: Proposition 29, Parallel Lines Converse

▶︎
Einstein OBSERVED Ramanujan's Work And Saw Mathematics That Shouldn't Exist

▶︎
1 Liberal Man vs 20 MAGA Women (ft. Dean Withers) | Surrounded

▶︎
18-Year-old Erling Haaland Scored 9 Goals in 1 Game

▶︎
