inverse
suomi-englanti sanakirjainverse englannista suomeksi
käänteinen, päinvastainen
vastakohta
käännetty
Substantiivi
vastakkainen lause">vastakkainen lause, vastakkainen väittämä">vastakkainen väittämä
Verbi
inverse englanniksi
Opposite in effect, nature or order.
Reverse, opposite in order.
Inverted; having a position or mode of attachment the reverse of that which is usual.
Having the properties of an inverse; ''said with reference to any two operations, which, when both are performed in succession upon any quantity, reproduce that quantity''.
(ux)
That has the property of being an inverse (the result of a inversion of a given point or geometrical figure); that is constructed by circle inversion. (C)
Whose every element has an inverse (morphism which is both a inverse and a inverse).
An inverted state: a state in which something has been turned down or out or backwards.
''Cowgirl is the inverse of missionary.''
''321 is the inverse of 123.''
The result of an inversion, ''particularly'':
''Uninstalling is the inverse of installation.''
A ratio etc. in which the antecedents and consequents are switched.
''The inverse of a:b is b:a.''
The result of a inversion; the set of all such points; the curve described by such a set.
''The inverse ''P‘'' of a point ''P'' is the point on a ray from the center ''O'' through ''P'' such that ''OP'' × ''OP‘'' = ''r²'' or the set of all such points.''
The non-truth-preserving proposition constructed by negating both the premise and conclusion of an initially given proposition.
''"Anything that isn't a dog doesn't go to heaven" is the inverse of "All dogs go to heaven." More generally, \lnot\mathsf{p}\to\lnot\mathsf{q} is the inverse of \mathsf{p}\to\mathsf{q} and is equivalent to the converse proposition \mathsf{q}\to\mathsf{p}.''
{{quote-text|en|year=1896|author=James Welton|title=A Manual of Logic|edition=2nd|section=Bk iii, Ch. iii, §102
A second element which negates a first; in a binary operation, the element for which the binary operation—when applied to both it and an initially given element—yields the operation's element, ''specifically:''
''The additive inverse of x is -x, as x-x=0, as 0 is the additive identity element.''
''The multiplicative inverse of x is x^{-1}, as x \times x^{-1}=1, as 1 the multiplicative identity element.''
A second function which, when combined with the initially given function, yields as its output any term inputted into the first function.
''The compositional inverse of a function f is f^{-1}, as f\ f^{-1}=\mathit{I}, as \mathit{I} is the identity function. That is, \forall x,f(f^{-1}(x))=\mathit{I}(x)=x.''
The winning of the coup in a game of et noir by a card of a color different from that first dealt; the area of the table reserved for bets upon such an outcome.
{{quote-text|en|year=1850|author=Henry George Bohn|title=The Hand-book of Games|page=343
{{quote-text|en|year=1950|author=Lawrence Hawkins Dawson|title=Hoyle's Games Modernized|edition=20th|page=291
A grammatical number marking that indicates the opposite grammatical number (or numbers) of the default number specification of noun class.
(da-e-form of)
(l)
(infl of)
(l), the other way round
the (l), the contrary
(syn)
(inflection of)
(de-adj form of)
(feminine plural of)