PlanetMath (more info)
 Math for the people, by the people.
Encyclopedia | Requests | Forums | Docs | Wiki | Random | RSS  
Login
create new user
name:
pass:
forget your password?
Main Menu
Owner confidence rating: Very high Entry average rating: No information on entry rating
terms from foreign languages used in mathematics (page images version) (Topic)

This entry is best viewed in page images mode. For the html version, click here.

Following are terms from foreign languages that appear in mathematical literature. Each chart (TeX object tabular) contains terms from the foreign language indicated. The foreign languages are ordered according to how many terms appear in its corresponding chart. In each chart, the terms are listed in alphabetical order.

Latin

abbr. term literal translation mathematical usage
a fortiori with stronger reason used in logic to denote an
argument to the effect that
because one ascertained fact exists;
therefore another which is
included in it or analogous to is
and is less improbable, unusual,
or surprising must also exist
a priori from the former already known/assumed
ad absurdum to absurdity an assumption is made in hopes of
obtaining a contradiction
[reductio ad absurdum is also used]
ad infinitum to infinity endlessly, infinitely
casus irreducibilis not-reducible case roots real but not
expressible via real radicals
cf. confer compare used to suggest that another
work might also be consulted
in relation to that argument
et al. et alii and others used in multi-author references
but it is customary to include
all the authors in the first
citation and/or in the
bibliography
e.g. exempli gratia for example's sake for example
ibid. ibidem in the same place relates to the
immediately prior source
i.e. id est that is that is
inf inferior, infimum lowest limit inferior; greatest lower bound
inter alia among other things among other things
loc. cit. loco citato in the place already mentioned relates to sources before the
immediately prior citation
[probably less frequent
than op. cit.]
lb logarithmus binaris binary logarithm log. in base 2
lg logarithmus generalis general logarithm log. in base 10
ln logarithmus naturalis natural logarithm log. in base $ e$
mutatis mutandis once changing thing to be changed repeat the similar argument
for the related case
N.B. nota bene note well the following is important
op. cit. opere citato in the work already mentioned relates to sources before the
immediately prior citation
[probably more frequent
than loc. cit.]
QED quod erat demonstrandum which was to be demonstrated end of proof
QEF quod erat faciendum which was to be done end of construction
regula falsi rule of false position Newton's method
sine qua non without which it could not be an essential condition
or element; an indispensable thing
sup superior, supremum uppermost limit superior, least upper bound
viz videlicet that is to say, namely a keynote abbreviation

German

abbr. term literal translation mathematical usage
  Ansatz approach, attempt assumed form for an expression
  eigen characteristic, typical eigenvalue; eigenvector
  Grösse, Größe size, magnitude Grössencharacter
  im kleinen in the small connected im kleinen
  Nullstellensatz zero point theorem zero point theorem
  Stufe stair, level stufe of a field
  Urelement primeval element set element which is not a set
$ V$, $ K_4$ Vierergruppe four-group Klein 4-group
$ \mathbb{Z}$ Zahlen numbers integers
$ Z$ Zentrum center center (of a group)

French

abbr. term literal translation mathematical usage
  espace space (topological) space [see Espace Étalé]
  étale slack étale fundamental group; étale morphism; étale site
  étalé spread out, displayed Étalé space
p.p. presque partout almost everywhere almost everywhere

Russian

abbr. term literal translation mathematical usage
$ \partial$ italic “д” [may be pronounced “doh”] letter “d” e.g. in $ \frac{\partial f}{\partial x}$ [see partial derivative]



Anyone with an account can edit this entry. Please help improve it!

"terms from foreign languages used in mathematics (page images version)" is owned by Wkbj79. [ full author list (5) ]
(view preamble)

View style:

See Also: terms from foreign languages used in mathematics (html version), mathematics vocabulary

Log in to rate this entry.
(view current ratings)

Cross-references: partial derivative, almost everywhere, presque partout, étalé, étale site, étale fundamental group, slack, étale, Espace Étalé, espace, Zentrum, integers, Zahlen, Klein 4-group, urelement, stufe of a field, stufe, Nullstellensatz, connected im kleinen, grössencharacter, size, eigenvector, eigenvalue, eigen, expression, Ansatz, videlicet, viz, limit superior, supremum, sine qua non, Newton's method, QEF, QED, opere citato, nota bene, mutatis mutandis, natural logarithm, logarithmus naturalis, ln, general logarithm, logarithmus generalis, base, log, binary logarithm, logarithmus binaris, loco citato, inter alia, greatest lower bound, limit inferior, infimum, id est, ibidem, exempli gratia, et alii, confer, expressible, real, roots, casus irreducibilis, infinity, ad infinitum, reductio ad absurdum, contradiction, ad absurdum, a priori, logic, a fortiori, literal, contains
There are 2 references to this entry.

This is version 33 of terms from foreign languages used in mathematics (page images version), born on 2006-07-27, modified 2008-04-21.
Object id is 8178, canonical name is TermsFromForeignLanguagesUsedInMathematicsPageImagesVersion.
Accessed 1671 times total.

Classification:
AMS MSC00A99 (General :: General and miscellaneous specific topics :: Miscellaneous topics)
 00A20 (General :: General and miscellaneous specific topics :: Dictionaries and other general reference works)

Pending Errata and Addenda
None.
Discussion
Style: Expand: Order:
forum policy
problems by Wkbj79 on 2006-09-08 02:33:12
When I view this entry in page images mode, the Latin chart is cut off somewhere around "sine qua non". Is this true for other people also? Does someone know how to fix this?

Warren
[ reply | up ]
totally different entry by Wkbj79 on 2006-07-27 11:52:31
Once I started playing around with the "terminology used in foreign languages" entry to make it more readable in page images mode, I found that trying to edit it in this matter made the html mode viewing look worse. Thus, I decided to create a totally different entry. On my end, there are still things wrong with it. (For instance, after "sine qua non", I cannot see any of the rest of the Latin chart; the German chart begins.) I have made this object world-editable so that yark and other "pages images people" can edit this to make it look better. I hope that this helps make everyone happy.

Warren
[ reply | up ]

Interact
post | correct | update request | add example | add (any)