terms |
subcountable |
As a noun terms
is .
As an adjective subcountable is
(mathematics) being the target of a partial surjection from the natural numbers, such that the set of numbers used to count is no larger than the set being counted.
count |
subcountable |
As a verb count
is to recite numbers in sequence.
As a noun count
is the act of or tallying a quantity or
count can be the male ruler of a county.
As an adjective subcountable is
(mathematics) being the target of a partial surjection from the natural numbers, such that the set of numbers used to count is no larger than the set being counted.
surjection |
subcountable |
As a noun surjection
is a function of "many-to-one" mapping relationship; more formally,
f:
X →
Y is a surjection if and only if, for every
y in the codomain
Y, there is at least one
x in the domain
X with
f(
x) =
y.
As an adjective subcountable is
being the target of a partial surjection from the natural numbers, such that the set of numbers used to count is no larger than the set being counted.
partial |
subcountable |
In mathematics terms the difference between partial and subcountable
is that
partial is a partial derivative: a derivative with respect to one independent variable of a function in multiple variables while
subcountable is being the target of a partial surjection from the natural numbers, such that the set of numbers used to count is no larger than the set being counted.
As a noun partial
is a partial derivative: a derivative with respect to one independent variable of a function in multiple variables.
subcountable |
subcountability |
As an adjective subcountable
is (mathematics) being the target of a partial surjection from the natural numbers, such that the set of numbers used to count is no larger than the set being counted.
As a noun subcountability is
the property of being subcountable.