A
acidfunk
Member
South Korea / Korean
- Apr 22, 2010
- #1
I am wondering how I can read this in English.
For example, m³ , m².
(triple m? double m?)
I have no idea. Please help me!
Copyright
Member Emeritus
Penang
American English
- Apr 22, 2010
- #2
m-cubed or m-squared if they are mathematical terms. Cubic meters or square meters if they are measurements of volume or area.
A
acidfunk
Member
South Korea / Korean
- Apr 22, 2010
- #3
Oh, easy! Cubic meters, square meters. Thank you
M
mathman
Senior Member
near boston
English-American/New England
- Apr 22, 2010
- #4
An easy way to remember this is that a square with side m has an area equal to m times m, or m^2 (m-squared), and a cube with side m has volume equal to m times m times m, or m^3 (m-cubed). If m is the unit "meter," then you read these as copyright stated.
(m^2 means m with an exponent (superscript) of 2.)
G
Gisty
Member
Indonesian-Malay
- Apr 23, 2010
- #5
What about 2^4, 2^5?
P
preppie
Senior Member
Mid Atlantic, US
American English (Mostly MidAtlantic)
- Apr 23, 2010
- #6
2 raised to the fourth(power); 2 raised to the fifth (power)
beccamutt
Senior Member
New Jersey, USA
English - US
- Apr 23, 2010
- #7
preppie said:
2 raised to the fourth(power); 2 raised to the fifth (power)
Or simply: 2 to the fourth [power]; 2 to the fifth [power]
Loob
Senior Member
English UK
- Apr 23, 2010
- #8
preppie said:
2 raised to the fourth(power); 2 raised to the fifth (power)
..... or 2 to the fourth, 2 to the fifth.
(We're moving away from areas and volumes now, of course)
EDIT: Dang, I see becca got there first! Well at least that proves 2 to the fourth etc works on both sides of the Atlantic
G
Gisty
Member
Indonesian-Malay
- Apr 23, 2010
- #9
That's great lesson. I wonder if i may ask a few more questions: 2^-2, 2^2+3, 2^0, 2^2/3. I would really appreciate your help.
beccamutt
Senior Member
New Jersey, USA
English - US
- Apr 23, 2010
- #10
Gisty said:
That's great lesson. I wonder if i may ask a few more questions: 2^-2, 2^2+3, 2^0, 2^2/3. I would really appreciate your help.
2 to the negative 2 [power]
2 squared plus 3
2 to the zero power (I think, I've never seen this, was never a math buff)
2 squared divided by 3
G
Gisty
Member
Indonesian-Malay
- Apr 23, 2010
- #11
Thank you, but why not 2^-2=two negative squared or may be two negatively squared. I hope, I'm not disturbing you again.
Loob
Senior Member
English UK
- Apr 23, 2010
- #12
I can't tell you
why....
But for me it would be 2 to the minus 2.
entangledbank
Senior Member
London
English - South-East England
- Apr 23, 2010
- #13
As a mathematician, I rarely use the word 'power' here. We normally read the expression a^b as "a to the b". If b is a simple number, I would use the ordinal:
a^4 = a to the fourth
7^9 = seven to the ninth
After a point, however, it becomes too awkward to stick on that '-th', so we just use the plain b.
x^-1 = x to the minus one
a^(b + 1) = a to the b plus one
15^0.5 = fifteen to the nought point five
P
preppie
Senior Member
Mid Atlantic, US
American English (Mostly MidAtlantic)
- Apr 23, 2010
- #14
Panj, Yes there really is Santa Clause .. and a 2^0.. anything raised to the 0 power is 1. It comes up lot in applied math.
Like English, math requires punctuation (especially without fonts or parentheses). 2^2/3 is either 2 to the two-thirds or 2 squared divided by three. Without explicit instructions it's 2 squared divided by three but I am not sure that's what you intended.
panjandrum
Senior Member
Belfast, Ireland
English-Ireland (top end)
- Apr 24, 2010
- #15
Previous threads on this subject can be found by searching for exponent
2 to the power [of] 2 is 4 (reading exponent)
http://forum.wordreference.com/showthread.php?t=1187690How to read this number (reading exponent)
Reading mathematical formulae with exponents (exponent)?
squared number / rooted number (reading exponent)
natkretep
Moderato con anima (English Only)
Singapore
English (Singapore/UK), basic Chinese
- Apr 24, 2010
- #16
preppie said:
2 raised to the fourth(power); 2 raised to the fifth (power)
We were taught '2 to the power of four' or '2 raised to four': we never used any ordinals.
panjandrum
Senior Member
Belfast, Ireland
English-Ireland (top end)
- Apr 24, 2010
- #17
One of many factors that influences how people say these things is familiarity. For some, these little superscripts were a topic of passing interest, and little interest at that. They remember the words and expressions used when they were taught about the concept.
For others, they became a topic of everyday conversation - an element of routine working activity. The wordy expressions used at first have been overwhelmed by the forms used in routine and rapid communication. In any case, those wordy expressions don't work when the exponent is something long and complex.
Hence etb's "a to the b" and my "X to the Y".
Uncle Bob
Senior Member
Hungary
British English
- Apr 24, 2010
- #18
Just one that entangledbank missed out.
x^0 is, for me, X to the nought (= 1) though if the word "power" were included it would be X to the power zero.
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