affine
See also: affiné
English
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /əˈfaɪn/
Adjective
affine (comparative more affine, superlative most affine)
- (mathematics) Assigning finite values to finite quantities.
- (geometry) Of or pertaining to a function expressible as
(where
is a linear transformation and
is a constant), which, regarded as a transformation, maps parallel lines to parallel lines and finite points to finite points.
- 1986, Patrick J. Ryan, Euclidean and Non-Euclidean Geometry: An Analytic Approach, Cambridge University Press, page 44,
- Now, let P, Q, and R be three noncollinear points that are left fixed by an affine transformation T.
- 1987, Neal Koblitz, A Course in Number Theory and Cryptography, Springer, page 81,
- In our example of the affine cryptosystem family, deciphering is also accomplished by an affine map, namely , and so the deciphering transformation uses the same algorithm as the enciphering transformation, except with a different key, namely, the pair .
- 2006, Charalambos D. Aliprantis, Kim C. Border, Infinite Dimensional Analysis: A Hitchhiker's Guide, Springer, 3rd Edition, page 256,
- Clearly every linear functional is affine, and every affine function is both convex and concave.
- 1986, Patrick J. Ryan, Euclidean and Non-Euclidean Geometry: An Analytic Approach, Cambridge University Press, page 44,
- (comparable, chemistry) Of two materials, having mutual affinity.
Derived terms
Derived terms
- affine geometry
- affine space
- affine span
Related terms
Translations
Noun
affine (plural affines)
- (anthropology, genealogy) A relative by marriage, an in-law.
- 1970 [Routledge and Kegan Paul], Raymond Firth, Jane Hubert, Anthony Forge, Families and Their Relatives: Kinship in a Middle-Class Sector of London, 2006, Taylor & Francis (Routledge), page 135,
- The element of personal idiosyncracy[sic] may be expected to be most marked in regard to affines (i.e. those related by marriage) and particularly with the consanguines of affines, who are linked by still more tenuous bonds. There are many possible degrees of affinal relationship here, but broadly affines separate into two main types: spouse of consanguine of Ego, and consanguine of spouse of Ego—exemplified by my brother's wife, and my wife's brother.
- 1997, Webb Keane, Signs of Recognition: Powers and Hazards of Representation in an Indonesian Society, University of California Press, page 51,
- In contrast to bonds of kaḅisu membership, which require ritual maintenance and can produce intense factional rivalries, and those of affines, which demand ongoing exchanges, unmediated relations of blood are created by nothing more than physical procreation. […] People's ability to swivel between these two rhetorical possibilities reflects the inherent tension that lies between affines, who are both others and extensions of oneself.
- 2004, Irving Goldman, Cubeo Hehénewa Religious Thought, Columbia University Press, page 64,
- For the Cubeo the Vekürüwá and Okómiwa were, as they say, designated to be their affines, in a manner that was calculated to emphasize their similarities rather than the formal differences that set contemporary intermarriages apart. I suspect that Cubeo themselves sense that an excessive intimacy with the contingent of affines may have been suitable for a formative period of still ambiguous distinctions, but not for the real social world.
- 1970 [Routledge and Kegan Paul], Raymond Firth, Jane Hubert, Anthony Forge, Families and Their Relatives: Kinship in a Middle-Class Sector of London, 2006, Taylor & Francis (Routledge), page 135,
Synonyms
- (relative by marriage): in-law
Derived terms
Related terms
Translations
in-law — see in-law
French
Italian
Adjective
affine (masculine and feminine plural affini)
Latin
Swedish
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.