Figure 1: A Wild Raspberry Plant growing against my Chicken House.
Figure 2: A mililitre that I drew, by hand, on graph paper.
Figure 3: Archimedes in the bath. I drew this with pencils and compasses on graph paper on an isometric plane. I then traced over it, and painted it in with poster paint.
Figure 4: I drew the above, Brain Damaged Horse, so as to remember that the Ancient-Greek word ‘hippos’ means ‘horse.’
Figure 5: This geometric shape is called an ‘annulus.’ This comes from the Old Latin word ‘an-‘ meaning ‘ring.’ The ‘-nulus’ part is merely its declensional ending. ‘Anulus’ is an alternate Latin spelling. An ‘annulus’ is defined as the area that exists between the circumferences of two concentric circles.
Figure 6: A circle. A circle can be defined as a ray of fixed length rotating 360° about a point forming one of the ray, or line segment’s vertices, thus generating a circle. In Latin a circle is ‘circus, circī, masculine,’ or ‘discus, discī, masculine .’ In Ancient Greek, a circle is ‘kúklos.’ It is from the Ancient-Greek word, ‘kúklos’ that we derive the English word, ‘cycle.’