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"Tan y groes" is a Welsh phrase that translates to "under the cross" in English. It refers to a place, often a chapel or a graveyard, located near a cross.

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1y ago

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Related Questions

What is the Welsh for 'New Cross'?

"Y Groes Newydd"?


What does Nant-y-Groes mean?

Nant-y-Groes is a Welsh place name that translates to "the brook of the crosses." In this context, "nant" means "brook" or "stream," while "groes" refers to "cross," suggesting a location where a brook may be associated with crosses or a site of significance. Such names often reflect the geographical features and historical or cultural elements of the area.


What groes on a mountain?

At the bottem groes plants


Which fruit grows on a cane?

Do you mean sugar? That groes on a cane!


What are the sum and difference identities for the sine cosine and tangent functions?

Sine sum identity: sin (x + y) = (sin x)(cos y) + (cos x)(sin y)Sine difference identity: sin (x - y) = (sin x)(cos y) - (cos x)(sin y)Cosine sum identity: cos (x + y) = (cos x)(cos y) - (sin x)(sin y)Cosine difference identity: cos (x - y) = (cos x)(cos y) + (sin x)(sin y)Tangent sum identity: tan (x + y) = [(tan x) + (tan y)]/[1 - (tan x)(tan y)]Tangent difference identity: tan (x - y) = [(tan x) - (tan y)]/[1 + (tan x)(tan y)]


If for a triangle abc tan a-b plus tan b-c plus tan c-a equals 0 then what can you say about the triangle?

tan (A-B) + tan (B-C) + tan (C-A)=0 tan (A-B) + tan (B-C) - tan (A-C)=0 tan (A-B) + tan (B-C) = tan (A-C) (A-B) + (B-C) = A-C So we can solve tan (A-B) + tan (B-C) = tan (A-C) by first solving tan x + tan y = tan (x+y) and then substituting x = A-B and y = B-C. tan (x+y) = (tan x + tan y)/(1 - tan x tan y) So tan x + tan y = (tan x + tan y)/(1 - tan x tan y) (tan x + tan y)tan x tan y = 0 So, tan x = 0 or tan y = 0 or tan x = - tan y tan(A-B) = 0 or tan(B-C) = 0 or tan(A-B) = - tan(B-C) tan(A-B) = 0 or tan(B-C) = 0 or tan(A-B) = tan(C-B) A, B and C are all angles of a triangle, so are all in the range (0, pi). So A-B and B-C are in the range (- pi, pi). At this point I sketched a graph of y = tan x (- pi < x < pi) By inspection I can see that: A-B = 0 or B-C = 0 or A-B = C-B or A-B = C-B +/- pi A = B or B = C or A = C or A = C +/- pi But A and C are both in the range (0, pi) so A = C +/- pi has no solution So A = B or B = C or A = C A triangle ABC has the property that tan (A-B) + tan (B-C) + tan (C-A)=0 if and only if it is isosceles (or equilateral).


How do you use tan in a c program?

double x, y; ... x = tan (y);


What is the oil mixture to weedeaters?

It groes


What is the period of tan?

The period of the function y= tan(x) is pie The periods of the functions y= cos(x) and y= sin(x) is 2pie


What is the period of tan x?

The period of the function y= tan(x) is pie The periods of the functions y= cos(x) and y= sin(x) is 2pie


What is the tangent ratio of angle y?

tan y = 20/15


How can arccot of tanx be simplified?

There is not much that can be done by way of simplification. Suppose arccot(y) = tan(x) then y = cot[tan(x)] = 1/tan(tan(x)) Now cot is NOT the inverse of tan, but its reciprocal. So the expression in the first of above equation cannot be simplified further. Similarly tan[tan(x)] is NOT tan(x)*tan(x) = tan2(x)