From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishgeodesicge‧o‧des‧ic /ˌdʒiːəʊˈdesɪk◂, -ˈdiː- $ ˌdʒiːoʊ-/ adjective [only before noun] having a shape or structure made from small flat pieces, usually triangles or pentagons, that are put together to form curves a geodesic dome
Examples from the Corpus
geodesic• Then, because the space is locally flat, each such path element is part of some geodesic.• He knew what Greenpeace was, and the geodesic dome, and sado-masochism, and even supply-side economics.• He was forty-four years old, on display under a geodesic dome.• These geodesic equations are quite familiar.• The analysis of Mercury's motion commences with the statement that Mercury follows a geodesic in the Schwarzschild space-time around the Sun.• In cases where the route does not follow a geodesic it would be necessary to split the path into infinitesimal steps.• Pitching: a fairly standard geodesic shape which is easy to erect.• K will have the same value for all geodesic surfaces and at all points.