inverse

inverse
1. adjective
umgekehrt [Reihenfolge]
2. noun
(opposite) Gegenteil, das; (inversion) Umkehrung, die
* * *
in·verse
[ɪnˈvɜ:s, AM -ˈvɜ:rs]
I. adj attr, inv umgekehrt, entgegengesetzt
\inverse function MATH Umkehrfunktion f, inverse Funktion fachspr
\inverse order umgekehrte Reihenfolge
to be in \inverse proportion [or relation] to sth im umgekehrten Verhältnis zu etw dat stehen, umgekehrt proportional zu etw dat sein
\inverse ratio umgekehrtes Verhältnis
II. n no pl Umkehrung f, Gegenteil nt
* * *
['ɪn'vɜːs]
1. adj
umgekehrt, entgegengesetzt

in inverse order — in umgekehrter Reihenfolge

2. n
Gegenteil nt
* * *
inverse [ˌınˈvɜːs; US ˈınˌvɜrs]
A adj (adv inversely)
1. umgekehrt, entgegengesetzt:
in inverse order in umgekehrter Reihenfolge;
be in inverse proportion (oder relation) to im umgekehrten Verhältnis stehen zu ( A 3)
2. verkehrt
3. MATH invers, reziprok, umgekehrt, entgegengesetzt:
inverse function inverse oder reziproke Funktion, Umkehrfunktion f;
inversely proportional umgekehrt proportional;
be in inverse proportion (oder relation) to umgekehrt proportional sein zu ( A 1)
4. MATH Arkus…:
inverse sine Arkussinus m
B s
1. Umkehrung f, Gegenteil n
2. MATH Inverse(s) n, Reziproke(s) n
* * *
1. adjective
umgekehrt [Reihenfolge]
2. noun
(opposite) Gegenteil, das; (inversion) Umkehrung, die
* * *
(Math) n.
Inverse -n (Mathematik) f. adj.
invertiert adj.
umgekehrt adj. n.
Umkehrfunktion (Mathematik) f.

English-german dictionary. 2013.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать реферат

Schlagen Sie auch in anderen Wörterbüchern nach:

  • inverse — [ ɛ̃vɛrs ] adj. et n. m. • 1611; envers XIIe; lat. inversus, de invertere « retourner » I ♦ Adj. 1 ♦ (Direction, ordre) Qui est exactement opposé, contraire. Dans l ordre inverse. Une relation inverse. Tourner dans le sens inve …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • inverse — in‧verse [ˌɪnˈvɜːs◂ ǁ ɜːrs◂] adjective in inverse proportion/​relation to something used for saying that one thing increases at the same rate as another related thing gets smaller: • Stocks moved in inverse relation to oil prices throughout the… …   Financial and business terms

  • Inverse — In*verse , a. [L. inversus, p. p. of invertere: cf. F. inverse. See {Invert}.] [1913 Webster] 1. Opposite in order, relation, or effect; reversed; inverted; reciprocal; opposed to {direct}. [1913 Webster] 2. (Bot.) Inverted; having a position or… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Inverse — or inversion may refer to:* Inverse (program), a program for solving inverse and optimization problems * Inversion (music) * Inversion (prosody), the reversal of the order of a foot s elements * Inversion (linguistics) * Inversion (law),… …   Wikipedia

  • inverse — [in vʉrs′, in′vʉrs΄] adj. [L inversus, pp. of invertere] 1. inverted; reversed in order or relation; directly opposite 2. Math. designating or of an operation which, when applied after a specific operation, cancels it [subtraction is the inverse… …   English World dictionary

  • Inverse — In verse, n. That which is inverse. [1913 Webster] Thus the course of human study is the inverse of the course of things in nature. Tatham. [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • inverse — I adjective antipodal, antipodean, antithetical, contrary, converse, conversus, diametrically opposite, inversus, inverted, opposite, reverse, reversed, transposed, turned about associated concepts: inverse condemnation, inverse discrimination II …   Law dictionary

  • Inverse — (franz., spr. ängwärß , umgekehrt), Kunstausdruck im Kartenspiel, s. Trente et quarante …   Meyers Großes Konversations-Lexikon

  • inverse — фр. [энвэ/рс], англ. [и/нвэс] inverso ит. [инвэ/рсо] противоположный, обратный …   Словарь иностранных музыкальных терминов

  • inverse — (adj.) mid 15c., from L. inversus, pp. of invertere (see INVERT (Cf. invert)). Related: Inversely. As a noun, 1680s, from the adjective …   Etymology dictionary

  • inverse — [adj] opposite changed, contrary, converse, flipped, inverted, reverse, reversed, reverted, transposed, turned, turned over; concept 564 …   New thesaurus

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”