adj
Relating to statistical calculation, especially pertaining to insurance.
n
Persian mathematician (c. 780 – c. 850), the father of algebra.
n
The use of abstract logic and symbol manipulation as opposed to empirical observation.
n
(uncountable, obsolete) Calculation with Arabic numerals; algorism.
n
(mathematics) A mathematician who studies real analysis.
n
(now rare) One with expertise in arithmetic; a mathematician.
adj
(linguistics) In which words are encoded as numbers
n
Alternative form of arithmosophy [A form of numerology that equates letters or words with numbers.]
adj
(mathematics) Pertaining to a logistic model that is based on autocorrelation.
n
(mathematics) The sign indicating that the characteristic of a logarithm is negative, conventionally placed above the digit(s) to show that it applies to the characteristic only and not to the mantissa.
adj
(probability, statistics) Of or pertaining to Bayes' theorem and its applications.
v
(mathematics) To represent in binary (base 2) notation
adj
(comparable) Focusing on two mutually exclusive conditions.
n
A name having two parts.
n
(mathematics) A formalism for a physical theory which is based upon the canonical equations of Hamiltonian dynamics.
n
A mathematician who specializes in combinatorics.
n
A mathematician who specializes in combinatorics.
n
An interdisciplinary branch of engineering and mathematics, dealing with the control of the behavior of dynamical systems.
adj
(mathematics) Of or pertaining to Diophantus, the Greek mathematician.
adj
(mathematics) Of or pertaining to a factor or factorial.
adj
Of or relating to the mathematician Fibonacci.
n
(mathematics) Any of the several axioms that an object should meet to be considered a mathematical field.
n
(mathematics) An extreme form of constructivism, according to which a mathematical object does not exist unless it can be constructed from natural numbers in a finite number of steps.
adj
(mathematics) Of or pertaining to the work of Robert Floyd, American mathematician and computer scientist.
n
(mathematics, physics) A particular mathematical or scientific theory or description of a given state or effect.
n
(mathematics) Any mathematical rule expressed symbolically.
n
A form of mathematics proposed for the study of quantum deformations.
n
Synonym of Gini coefficient
n
(graph theory) A mathematician or computer scientist who specializes in graph theory
n
An algebraist who specializes in group theory
n
(mathematics, law) The application of quantitative and statistical methods to law.
adj
(mathematics) Synonym of lectic.
adj
(of a plotted graph) Having a logarithmic scale on the vertical axis and a linear scale on the horizontal axis.
n
Paper with horizontal and vertical rules, both arranged according to a logarithmic scale.
n
(US) The action, or the result of logarithmizing
adj
(operations) Relating to logistics.
adj
Relating to logistics.
n
A person involved with logistics.
n
Abbreviation of mathematics. [An abstract representational system studying numbers, shapes, structures, quantitative change and relationships between them.]
n
(rare) A genre of pseudohaiku which combines a very short poetic structure with elegant mathematical expression; also, an example of this genre.
n
The jargon associated with mathematics.
adj
Of, or relating to mathematics
n
(economics, mathematics) A sub-field of economics which aims at expressing economic theories with mathematic formulae.
n
(philosophy) A doctrine that mathematical entities such as numbers and triangles exist independently of the human mind.
n
(computer science) A study of formal semantics of computer languages, such as denotational semantics.
n
An approach or worldview that is rooted in mathematics
adj
Obsolete form of mathematic. [(archaic) mathematical]
n
(Australia, Queensland) The least advanced of the three OP-eligible mathematics subjects available to Queensland students in years 11 and 12.
n
(Australia, Queensland) The most advanced of the three OP-eligible mathematics subjects available to Queensland students in years 11 and 12.
n
A quasi-scientific symbolic formula serving to represent an idea, used in the works of French psychoanalyst Jacques Lacan.
adj
(US) Of or relating to mathletes.
n
(UK, Cambridge and Oxford University slang) A mathematician.
adj
(colloquial) Relating to mathematics, typically connotating that the mathematics referred to is difficult.
adj
(colloquial) Alternative form of mathsy (mathematics) [(colloquial) Relating to mathematics, typically connotating that the mathematics referred to is difficult.]
n
A mathematician who studies matrices
adj
Pertaining to metamathematics, a branch of mathematics dealing with mathematical systems and their nature.
adj
(mathematics) having an arity of one (taking a single argument or operand)
n
Synonym of felicific calculus
adj
(mathematics) Derived from multiple exponents
adj
(mathematics) logistic in multiple ways
adj
Relating to multiplication.
adj
Of or pertaining to multiplication.
n
(software engineering, UML) The number of instances that can occur on a given end of a relationship, including 0..1, 1, 0..* or *, and 1..*.
n
(somewhat rare) A number theorist.
n
(mathematics) A mathematician whose speciality is numerical methods
n
The field of numerically-controlled engineering
adj
Of or pertaining to numbers and language.
n
(mathematics) The system of equations required for the complete expression of the relations which exist between a set of quantities.
n
(mathematics) polylogarithm
n
Someone who studies probability, a particular branch of mathematics.
adj
(mathematics) Of or pertaining to properads.
adj
(mathematics) Relying on simplifying assumptions in order to create a less complex alternative to a full analytical approach.
n
Any pseudoscientific form of mathematics.
adj
Relating to pseudorationalism
n
The study of mathematical concepts independently of applications outside mathematics.
adj
Seemingly or speciously mathematical.
adj
Seemingly or speciously numerical.
n
(computing) Metasyntactic variable.
n
(arithmetic) The practice of performing arithmetic using Napier's bones.
adj
(physics) Expressing a physical object.
n
an approach to mathematics education, particularly in North America
n
Alternative form of rabdology [(arithmetic) The practice of performing arithmetic using Napier's bones.]
adj
Synonym of ring-theoretic
n
(arithmetic) A square root (understood if no power is specified; in which case, "the root of" is often abbreviated to "root").
n
(mathematics) In the philosophy of mathematics, a theory that holds that mathematical theories describe structures, and that mathematical objects are exhaustively defined by their place in such structures.
adj
(mathematics) Of a set of points: defined in a way broader than for semianalytic sets.
n
(philosophy) A subdivision of a symbol
n
A hierarchical superior module
n
The study of all the theorems associated with a particular subject.
adj
Abbreviation of transcendental logarithmic.
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