Example of an affine space that is not euclidean

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Wikipedia says that Euclidean space is affine (obvious), but that not all affine spaces are Euclidean.

I understand that Euclidean space has extra structure defined on it, namely metrics of distance and angles.

However, are there actual examples of affine spaces that are not Euclidean?

ps. I am not talking about the vector space $R^d$, but about the manifold $E^d$, which is a metric affine space, but not a vector space, though it can be charted by the cartesian coordinates in $R^d$.

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An euclidean space is an affine space which contain $0$.

So for instance the line of equation $y=1$ in the plane in an affine space, but it is not an euclidean space ($0$ does not belong to this line).

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A space with a Minkowski geometry is an affine space with a non euclidean geometry. In such a geometry the notion of orthogonality is defined using an ''inner product'' that is not positive defined and we have not the usual rotations but hyperbolic rotations. This is the geometry of the relativity theory.