The word 'reci[procal' is a maths term.
It means inversion of numbers.
e.g. 2 its reciprocal is 1/2
1/3 its reciprocal is 3 .
et.seq.,
The reciprocal is the "multiplicative inverse". This means 1 divided by the number. The reciprocal of 2 is 1/2, the reciprocal of 5 is 1/5, etc.
Well, hello there! In math, the reciprocal of a number is simply 1 divided by that number. It's like a friendly dance partner that, when multiplied with the original number, always equals 1. So, just remember, when you hear "reciprocal," think of it as a mathematical hug between numbers.
1/2. Reciprocal is the term inverted so 2 over 1 becomes 1 over 2
Oh, dude, the reciprocal of a number is just 1 divided by that number. So, the reciprocal of 2 is 1/2, and the reciprocal of 1/3 is 3. So, the reciprocal of 2 and 1/3 is 1/(2 + 1/3) which simplifies to 3/7. Easy peasy, like basic math stuff, you know?
A math expression is a collection of math terms
Flip is the technical term for a reciprocal. (The reciprocal of 3/4 is 4/3)
The reciprocal is the "multiplicative inverse". This means 1 divided by the number. The reciprocal of 2 is 1/2, the reciprocal of 5 is 1/5, etc.
Reciprocal would do in certain cases. 1 one tenth is the reciprocal of 10 in arithmetic 270º is the reciprocal of 90º in geometry Inverse would do as well - a reciprocal is an inverse for multiplication. negation means something like the opposition in logic. complement has the meaning of opposite in some cases. opposite is itself a math term- used in geometry as in the phrase "opposite side of a parallellogram".
Either it is an expression yelled by a teacher when something goes wrong, or it is an alternative term for "to find the reciprocal of". For example, the reciprocal of 3/4 is equal to 4/3 - you have "flipped" the fraction around.
-My teacher likes for us to use math terms, such as reciprocal, in class.
1/a is the reciprocal of a
Ah, what a happy little math question we have here! To find the reciprocal of a number, you simply flip it upside down. So, the reciprocal of 2 is 1/2 and the reciprocal of 7 is 1/7. Remember, there are no mistakes in math, just happy little accidents!
The reciprocal of any non-zero number is one divided by that number. The reciprocal of 0 is not defined. For example, if R(x) represents the reciprocal of x, then R(6) = 1/6 R(5/7) = 1 / (5/7) = 1*(7/5) = 7/5 R(x) = 1/x
A reciprocal is useful to know in math because to divide fractions, you must multiply by the second fraction's reciprocal. For example: 2/3 divided by 4/7 is the same as 2/3 times 7/4.
Reflect.
The reciprocal of a number is: 1 divided by the number. Example: the reciprocal of 2 is 1/2 and 5 is 1/5..
Well, hello there! In math, the reciprocal of a number is simply 1 divided by that number. It's like a friendly dance partner that, when multiplied with the original number, always equals 1. So, just remember, when you hear "reciprocal," think of it as a mathematical hug between numbers.