Sure! Here's an example sentence using each of the letters in "soh cah toa":
"Silly ostriches hop, carrying apples happily towards open apples."
It is pronounced as "MAH-tu GROH-soh," with the stress on the first syllable of each word.
It is pronounced "neet-soh-tsohts."
"Socius" is pronounced as SOH-shee-us.
It is pronounced "bell-joe-ZO-soh."
It is pronounced "os-soh buh-koh."
sin cos tan -soh cah toa
Using trigonometry... SOH CAH TOA
Two options: -Option#1 (only if the measure of the angle is given): Use the calculator. -Option#2 (only if the length of the sides are given): Use SOH-CAH-TOA. (If you are not familiar with SOH-CAH-TOA, search it up.)
Sohcahtoa is an abbreviation (SOH) sine opposite hypotenuse (CAH) cosine adjacent hypotenuse (TOA) tangent opposite adjacent.
SoH: used for finding the sine of a triangle in trigonometry: Opposite/HypotenuseCaH: used for finding the cosine of a triangle in trigonometry: Adjacent/HypotenuseToA: used for finding the tangent of a triangle in trigonometry: Opposite/Adjacent
It is pronounced as CAH-né Corso.
SOH CAH TOA is a way of remembering what the functions sin, cos, & tan mean in a right angle triangle. With a triangle with one of the acute angles labelled (theta) the longest side H (Hypotenuse), the side opposite the labelled angle O, and the short side closest to the angle A (Adjacent) SOH ->SIN(Theta)=0/H CAH ->COS(Theta)=A/H TOA ->TAN(Theta)=O/A
You need to know at least one side......after that you can use the angles to apply the equations, SOH CAH TOA.
SOH CAH TOASin Cos TanRemember O stands for opposite hypotenuse, Astands for adjacent (opposite angle) and H stands for hypotenuse (The longest side).
For a right angle triangle the formulae are:- Sine = opposite/hypotenuse Cosine = adjacent/hypotenuse Tangent = opposite/adjacent An easy way to remember them is: SOH-CAH-TOA
sohcahtoa SOH|CAH|TOA S= O opposite over hypotenuse _ H C=A adjacent over hypotenuse _ H T=O opposite over adjacent _ A
In a right triangle, its Opposite/Hypotenuse I always use: Soh (sin, opposite/hypotenuse) Cah (cosine, adjacent/hypotenuse) Toa (tangent, opposite/adjacent) Hope this helped! :)