C with a horizontal line above it is the Roman numeral for 100,000 which can also be written as (C)
"c" with an over-score means "with"
C with a line over it means with, and s with a line over it means without.
w with a line over means 'which'. c with a line over means 'with'.
With
C with a line over it means "with."It means "with", but the c usually has a horizontal line over the top of it."c" with a funny dash across the top means "with".Vitamin c.
111,011 is ↈↂMXI. Isn't C with a line over it 100,000? If so C(with a line over it)XI
It is a line of the form y = c where c is any constant.It is a line of the form y = c where c is any constant.It is a line of the form y = c where c is any constant.It is a line of the form y = c where c is any constant.
It is a symbol for the word "with".
IC (C with line over it).
You really can't, as I don't want to be here all day typing M's, but it would be M with a line over it (x9542) C with a line over it, D with a line over it, L with a line over it, X with a line over it (x48), CXXXV.
You can use w/o. In medical shorthand without is a s with a line over it and with is a c with a line over it
A c with a line over it means with in medical terms, and an s with a line over it means without in medical terms. I don't know of any major revision in that tradition.
With, without, before, and after are each symbolized with a single letter with a horizontal line written over it:With: cwithout: sbefore: aafter: p