Maths: Mathematical cues and terminology are often confusing and can be a barrier to learning and understanding basic numbers.
This page complements our Numerology skills pages and provides a quick glossary of general math symbols and terminology with brief definitions.
Mathematical symbols – always small, indescribable and mostly random – are all important. Some mathematical symbols are Greek and Latin letters, dating back centuries. Others, such as plus, minus, time and part symbols seem just instructions on paper. Nevertheless, symbols in mathematics are the suggestions that drive this field of scholars. And, they need true value in the real world.
A sign (+) can tell you if you are adding cash to your checking account, while a forward sign (-) can indicate trouble – you are deducting funds and potentially risking a cash crunch. Parenthesis, which in English punctuation indicates that you are inserting an unusual idea into a sentence – has another meaning in mathematics: you have to work before whatever those two punctuation marks are, and only then do the rest of the work. Read on to find out what general math symbols are, what they represent, and why they are important.
You use mathematical symbols you experience whole areas of your life. As indicated above, the difference between the plus or minus symbol in banking may indicate whether you are adding funds to your checking account or withdrawing funds. If you’ve ever used a computer accounting spreadsheet, you probably know that the large amount symbol (∑) gives you an easy – really quick way to display an infinite column of numbers.
“Pie”, denoted by the Greek letter, is employed in the planets of mathematics, science, physics, architecture and more. Despite the origin of pi in the subject of geometry, this number has application in mathematics and is also shown in the subjects of statistics and probability. And so the symbol of infinity (∞) is not only a concept of critical mathematics, but it also signifies the infinite expansion of the universe (in astronomy) or the infinite possibilities coming from every action or thought (in philosophy). Maths