Get Free Checker

minuend

NOUN
  1. the number from which the subtrahend is subtracted

How To Use minuend In A Sentence

  • It may seem a matter of trivial importance whether the pupil increases the subtrahend number or decreases the minuend number when he subtracts digits that involve taking or borrowing; and yet investigation proves that to increase the subtrahend number is by far the simpler process, and eliminates both a source of waste and a source of error, which, in the aggregate, may assume a significance to mental economy that is well worth considering. Craftsmanship in Teaching
  • Of course, that means the minuend of the equations does not exist.
  • In either case the two notes will typically be slurred and played with a diminuendo.
  • I need help understanding the rules of subtracting binary numbers when the subtrahend is larger then the minuend.
  • Her diminuendo is the non plus ultra that can be heard; her portamento wonderfully fine; her chromatic scales, especially toward the upper part of her voice, unrivalled. Frederic Chopin as a Man and Musician
  • There is a crescendo, a sudden piano, a diminuendo and quiet ending in D.
  • One day Gert played even more poorly than usual at her lesson, and when Mr. Auer scolded her for not heeding the diminuendo and fortepiano, she confessed, in fits and starts, her dilemma. Goodnight Dogs
  • #Subs is the number of possible subtrahends to be subtracted from minuends.
  • The most magical moments revealed the possibilities for crescendo and diminuendo as a gee-whiz technological advance: Bezuidenhout let the close of the Variations toll ever softer, until it simply dissolved into the white noise of passing traffic. Archive 2009-06-01
  • The music of commerce would thus be harmonious and evenly paced, its dynamics restrained; there would be no swelling crescendo of the Boom, no cacophonous accelerando to the climax and no minor key diminuendo thereafter into the Bust.
View all