I'm reading a book on Metric Spaces and the author is always talking about the "geometry" of some metric spaces, but he doesn't say what he means by geometry.
For example:
Despite the fact that it is infinite-dimensional, the next example shares many nice geometric properties with the real line $\mathbb{R}$.
$\textbf{Example}$: $(l_\infty)$ This is the space whose elements consist of all bounded sequences $(x_1,x_2,..)$ of real numbers, with the distance $d_\infty (x,y)$ between two such sequences $x=(x_1,x_2,...)$ and $y=(x_1,x_2,...)$ taken as $d_\infty (x,y)=\sup\limits_{1\leq i <\infty}|x_i-y_i|$.
I think he is talking about some theorems that are true on both metric spaces and he considers to be of a "geometric flavor", but he gives no example of such theorems.
What does the author mean by "geometry" in this case? If I'm right, examples of such theorems would be nice.