As a mathematical word it is pronounced 'sign'.
As a Ltin word it is pronounced as ' seenay'.
I believe you pronounce it sine just like you would in "Sign"
In Latin, you would pronounce it fee-lee-eye loon-eye. In English, you can pretty much say it any way you want. For common Latin words used in English, there is often a "way" to say them, as in sine die. In Latin, sine die is sin-ay dee-ay, but legislatures everywhere say sign-ee die (referring to the last moment of a legislative session).
sine 810 = sine 90 = 1
The pronunciation of "nulla poena sine lege" is as follows: Noo-la pweh-na see-neh leh-geh Note: The pronunciation is given in an approximate manner using English phonetics. It may vary slightly depending on regional accents and pronunciation norms.
Sine(A+ B) = Sine(A)*Cosine(B) + Cosine(A)*Sine(B).
Sine 3.3 degrees is about 0.057564. Sine 3.3 radians is about -0.157746. Sine 3.3 grads is about 0.051813.
Sine does not converge but oscillates. As a result sine does not tend to a limit as its argument tends to infinity. So sine(infinity) is not defined.
sine dine
sine 45 = 0.850903525
Sine 153 = 0.806400581
a)set of sine waves b)set of sine waves with phase zero
sine 40° = 0.642788