¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Radixes
1. radix [n] - See also: radix
Lexicographical Neighbors of Radixes
Literary usage of Radixes
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Michigan Journal of Education and Teachers' Magazine by Michigan Education Association (1856)
"Meanwhile, if onr directions have been followed, the little ones hav» learned
the meaning of a large number of radixes and préfixe. ..."
2. An English and Welch Vocabulary: Or, An Easy Guide to the Antient British by Thomas Evans, Thomas Richards (1804)
"... of their radixes, change that, a into ai or ti in the third Person singu 1
ar ; as, Saf, salt'; ... radixes, change that o into y; as Tro, try; torr, ..."
3. Correspondence of Scientific Men of the Seventeenth Century: Including by Isaac Barrow, John Flamsteed, John Wallis, Stephen Peter Rigaud, Isaac Newton (1841)
"I have, therefore, pasted new radixes to the meridian of Derby, that so they may
comply the better with my solar numbers. I have so pasted them, that, ..."
4. The R.I. Schoolmaster by Rhode Island Commissioner of Public Schools (1857)
"Meanwhile, if our directions have been followed, the little ones have learned
the meaning of a large number of radixes and prefixes, and the manner of ..."
5. A Review of the Works of the Royal Society of London: Containing by John Hill (1751)
"He tells us, that many of them grow from plain radixes of a round or angular ...
Plants when they are found yet adhering to the radixes already mentioned, ..."