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- How do I say “±” in English? - English Language Learners Stack . . .
If the symbol appears before a confidence interval in the numeral part of a quantity, then too the pronunciation is "plus or minus" If the symbol appears before the first term in an expression, then the meaning is that the term is positive or negative In this case, the pronunciation is "positive or negative"
- punctuation - What is the - character on my keyboard? - English . . .
In my experience, however, en-dash, hyphens, and minus signs are all routinely denoted by the same symbol in typing on a computer, and are used interchangeably
- word request - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
What's an umbrella term for addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division? What do you individually call each of these: 1+2, 5-2, 3*4, 10 5? Those cannot be quot;problems quot; Are those
- What is the part of speech of add in one add four equals five?
+ in math is a sign And we say plus by convention In fact, the formal term for it is: a plus sign The others signs are: the minus sign (-), the multiplication sign (x) and the division sign (÷) Adding (addition) If you add [verb] 2 plus 2 you get: 4 To use add (add is always a verb), you need two numbers if demonstrating an addition problem
- interpretation - Whats the meaning of within x of something . . .
Or informally ± (plus or minus) The point x is within the circle C In this situation I would assume you mean strictly less than I e if the point lies exactly on the border of the circle, it is no longer considered to be 'within' the circle: Let d_x be the distance from the center of circle C to point x Let r be the radius of C d_x < r
- mathematics - Arithmetic expressions: singular or plural? - English . . .
This is an mathematical statement and the "plus" is part of the first expression that is equal to four (which is the second expression) Similarly, two times three equals six, and three minus one equals five minus three
- Minus a logarithm - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
I have to explain in words this formula: A = -log(X) My guesses would be either: A is the minus logarithm of X A is minus the logarithm of X Is one of these expressions, or yet another one, correct?
- pronunciation - Negative numbers: minus or negative? - English . . .
Because, however, the minus sign is used in mathematics to designate (1) negative numbers, (2) the operation of subtraction, and (3) additive inverses, it is very common for people, even mathematicians, to use "minus" in speech indiscriminately for all three
- is equal to versus equals when reading = in math
In mathematics you have a lot of symbols, and those symbols have names For example, plus (+), minus (-), and of course equals (=) When stating equations with a true answer, we usually read from left to right and say those symbols by their name So, for example: 1+1=2 would read as " one plus one equals two "
- mathematics - How to read 1 + (-2) = -1 and 1 - 2 = -1 - English . . .
The first one can be read similarly (one plus minus two equals minus one), but having something like 1 - (1 - 2) = 2, that's different, you need to say there's a bracket, and then that's one minus, open bracket, one minus two, close bracket, equals two You can also use parenthesis
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