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Definition of Mathematical symbol
1. Noun. A character that is used to indicates a mathematical relation or operation.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Mathematical Symbol
Literary usage of Mathematical symbol
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Science by American Association for the Advancement of Science (1895)
"The Newtonian force considered formally is a mathematical symbol, a rate of
variation, or, as the mathematician calls it, a differential coefficient, ..."
2. The Geometry of the Circle and Mathematics as Applied to Geometry by by James Smith (1869)
"... the following is an unfair question to put to him :—Does the mathematical
symbol TT denote a determinate or an indeterminate arithmetical quantity ? ..."
3. Monographs on Topics of Modern Mathematics: Relevant to the Elementary Field by George Abram Miller, Frederick Shenstone Woods, Leonard Eugene Dickson, Thomas Franklin Holgate, Edward Vermilye Huntington, David Eugene Smith, Oswald Veblen, Gilbert Ames Bliss, J. W. A. (Jacob William Albert) Young (1911)
"The graph as a mathematical symbol. From the remarks which have been made it may
be inferred that graphs have two distinct and important uses, ..."
4. Gravitation Versus Relativity: A Non-technical Explanation of the by Charles Lane Poor, Thomas Chrowder Chamberlin (1922)
"It is useless to attempt to illustrate or visualize the connection between time
and space; the very mathematical symbol used to denote the form of the ..."
5. An Introduction to Logic by Horace William Brindley Joseph (1906)
"Whatever sign be wed, whether an inflexion, or the verb substantive, or the
mathematical symbol for equality, or anything else, this synthesis, ..."
6. Cyclopedia of Applied Electricity: A General Reference Work on Direct by American Technical Society (1916)
"... pitch Z -Number of conductors on the armature counting all around the
periphery > —mathematical symbol, to read "greater than" < -mathematical symbol, ..."
7. Cyclopedia of Applied Electricity: A General Reference Work on Direct by American Technical Society (1913)
"... pitch Z —Number of conductors on the armature counting all around the
periphery > —mathematical symbol, to read "greater than" < -mathematical symbol, ..."