additive
English
Etymology
From Late Latin additivus, from the participial stem of Latin addere (“to add”).
Adjective
additive (comparative more additive, superlative most additive)
- (mathematics) Pertaining to addition; that can be, or has been, added.
- (mathematics, of a function, etc.) That is distributive over addition.
- Matrix multiplication is additive, in that .
- (group theory, of a group, semigroup, etc.) Whose operator is identified as addition.
- It is natural to look at a finite cyclic group as an additive group.
- (chemistry) Pertaining to chemical addition.
- (genetics) Of or pertaining to genes (or the interaction etc. of such genes) which govern the same trait and whose effects work together on the phenotype.
Translations
which can be added
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Coordinate terms
Derived terms
- additive color
- additive function
- additive group
- additive identity
- additive inverse
Related terms
Noun
additive (plural additives)
Translations
substance added to another substance to produce certain properties
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References
- additive in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913.
- additive in The Century Dictionary, New York, N.Y.: The Century Co., 1911.
Further reading
Additive genetic effects on Wikipedia.Wikipedia Additive polynomial on Wikipedia.Wikipedia Additive utility on Wikipedia.Wikipedia Freshman's dream on Wikipedia.Wikipedia (In which the function ƒ(x) = xn is erroneously thought to be additive.) Weakly additive on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
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