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1
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Having the dimensions of height and width, height and depth, or width and depth only.
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2
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A form of pictorial in which an object is represented as true width and height, but the depth can be any size and drawn at any angle.
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3
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A line which represents distance.
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4
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1. The documents that are required for something or that give evidence or proof of something. 2. Drawings or printed information that contain instructions for assembling, installing, operating, and servicing.
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5
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1. The relationship of one thing to another in size, amount, etc. 2. Size or weight relationships among structures or among elements in a single structure.
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6
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Sketching which is done manually without the aid of instruments such as rulers.
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8
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1. A straight-edged strip of rigid material marked at regular intervals that is used to measure distances. 2. A proportion between two sets of dimensions used to develop accurate, larger or smaller prototypes, or models.
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9
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Line which shows where part is broken to reveal detail behind the part or to shorten a long continuous part.
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10
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The process of using dimensions, quantity, or capacity by comparison with a standard in order to mark off, apportion, lay out, or establish dimensions.
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11
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A location in space.
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12
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A measurable extent, such as the three principal dimensions of an object is width, height, and depth.
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13
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A drawing that is used to show the material, size, and shape of a product for manufacturing purposes.
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15
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An outline of an object when viewed from one side.
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16
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A regular oval shape, traced by a point moving in a plane so that the sum of its distances from two other points is constant, or resulting when a cone is cut by an oblique plane which does not intersect the base.
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20
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A three-dimensional body or geometric figure.
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21
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An imaginary line that is used to locate or project the corners, edges, and features of a three-dimensional object onto an imaginary two-dimensional surface.
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26
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A sketch that shows an object’s height, width, and depth in a single view.
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29
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1. A long thin mark on a surface. 2. A continuous extent of length, straight or curved, without breadth or thickness; the trace of a moving point. 3. Long, narrow mark or band.
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30
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A flat surface on which a straight line joining any two points would wholly lie.
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31
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A network of lines that cross each other to form a series of squares or rectangles.
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35
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Colloquial term for views of an object projected onto two or more orthographic planes in a multi-view drawing.
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38
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A line which indicates that a very long objects with uniform detail is drawn foreshortened.
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39
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The process of using dimensions, quantity, or capacity by comparison with a standard in order to mark off, apportion, lay out, or establish dimensions.
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40
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A line type that represents an edge that is not directly visible.
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42
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Line which represents where a dimension starts and stops.
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43
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Thin lines used in a section view to indicate where the cutting plane line has cut through material.
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