No, "altogether" is not another word for addition. "Altogether" means completely or entirely, while addition refers to the mathematical operation of joining two or more numbers together to get a sum.
An operator is a mapping from one vector space to another.
Not sure what you mean by "the following"; but one word that is often related to division is "per".
Formula
division
No, "altogether" is not another word for addition. "Altogether" means completely or entirely, while addition refers to the mathematical operation of joining two or more numbers together to get a sum.
An operator is a mapping from one vector space to another.
The result of the mathematical operation 5339 is 92.
The result of the mathematical operation 5238 is 90.
The result of the mathematical operation 52 36 is 88.
The result of the mathematical operation 38 52 is 90.
Operation
Resta can mean rest, residue, remainder, or subtraction.
The suffix in subtraction is "-tion." This suffix is added to the word "subtract" to create the noun form "subtraction," which refers to the mathematical operation of taking one number away from another.
"o11" is a shorthand notation for the word "operation." It is commonly used in engineering and mathematical contexts to refer to a specific operation. The "o" stands for the first letter of the word "operation," and the "11" represents the number of letters between the first and last letters in the word.
There are a couple of likely possibilities:definition - the meaning of a word, or the sharpness of an imagedifferentiation - a mathematical operation, especially calculus
Not sure what you mean by "the following"; but one word that is often related to division is "per".