Notation vs Notationally - What's the difference?
notation | notationally |
(uncountable) The act, process, method, or an instance of representing by a system or set of marks, signs, figures, or characters.
(uncountable) A system of characters, symbols, or abbreviated expressions used in an art or science or in mathematics or logic to express technical facts or quantities.
(countable) A specific note or piece of information written in such a notation.
In terms of notation.
* {{quote-journal, 2008, date=September 6, Ian McDiarmid, Underdetermination and Meaning Indeterminacy: What is the Difference?, Erkenntnis, url=, doi=10.1007/s10670-008-9122-1, volume=69, issue=3, pages=
, passage=If all our acceptable theories are on similar evidential footings (neither the theory nor the theory language is fixed by the relevant evidence) then the distinction between notationally indeterminate theories and underdetermined theories comes down to just the fact that intertranslation is possible in the former but not the latter. }}
As a noun notation
is the act, process, method, or an instance of representing by a system or set of marks, signs, figures, or characters.As an adverb notationally is
in terms of notation.notation
English
(wikipedia notation)Noun
- She made a notation in the margin of the book.