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inclined plane
noun
- one of the simple machines, a plane surface inclined inclined to the horizon, or forming with a horizontal plane any angle but a right angle. Compare machine ( def 4b ).
inclined plane
noun
- a plane whose angle to the horizontal is less than a right angle
inclined plane
/ ĭn′klīnd′ /
- A plane surface, such as a ramp or a blade, set at an acute angle to a horizontal surface, a direction of motion, or a direction of force. Inclined planes are used to increase the distance over which work is done, reducing the amount of force needed to impart energy to a system. Rolling a car up a hill, for example, requires less force than lifting it straight up off the ground. Many tools, such as the ax, wedge, chisel, and highway ramp, exploit the mechanical properties of the inclined plane.
Word History and Origins
Origin of inclined plane1
Example Sentences
But Galileo saw a deeper truth in the inclined plane experiments.
Lift with some danged pulley system involving fulcrums and levers and inclined planes, or, better yet, just hire some dumb lunk.
His observations of a swinging pendulum, and of balls rolling down inclined planes, are classic examples.
Some were the remains of an inclined plane, or funicular, which was built where a slope was too steep for the early locomotives to travel up and down safely.
An inclined plane will force your glutes and hamstrings to put in more work, said Leslie Stenger, assistant professor in the department of health and physical education at Indiana University of Pennsylvania.
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