A B C D E F G H I JKL MN O P Q R S T UV WXYZ
Algebra 2 Connections Glossary
major axis  
  The longer axis of an ellipse.  The distance from the center of the ellipse to the end of the major axis is the semi-major axis, represented as a in the general equation.  (pp. 574, 576) See “ellipse.”
mathematical induction   
  In this course, a method of proof that can be used to prove that a formula is true for any natural number (n = 1, 2, 3, ….)  Such a proof consists of the following steps:  (i) Verify that the formula is true for n = 1.  (ii) Write the general statement of the formula for n = k+1.  (iii) Show and justify the reasoning needed to move from the result for n = k to get to the next case where n = k + 1  .  (pp. 629, 632)
matrix   
  A rectangular array of numbers or algebraic expressions enclosed in square brackets. 
 
Usually a matrix is denoted by a capital letter.  The plural is “matrices.”  Each matrix has horizontal rows and vertical columns. The number of rows and columns describe the matrix, so if a matrix has m rows and n columns we say the matrix has dimension m by n.  We often write that mi,j is the entry in the ith row and the jth column.  In the 3x3  matrix at right, m2,3 = 2.  (p. 351)

pic

maximize   
  Make as large as possible.  (pp. 242, 246)
maximum point  
  The highest point on a graph.  For example, the vertex of a downwardly oriented parabola.  (pp. 242, 246)
maximum value   
  The largest value in the range of a function.  For example, the y-coordinate of the vertex of a downwardly oriented parabola.  (pp. 242, 246)
mean   
  The average for a set of data.  The mean is found by summing all the numbers and dividing the sum by the number of pieces of data.  (p. 94)
median   
  The middle score of a set of data.  The median is found by arranging the numbers from highest to lowest and finding the number in the middle.  If the number of values is even, the median is the average (mean) of the two middle numbers.  (p. 94)
minimize  
  Make as small as possible.  (pp. 242, 246)
minimum point  
  The lowest point on a graph.  For example, the vertex of an upwardly oriented parabola.  (p. 242, 246)
minimum value  
  The smallest value in the range of a function.  For example, the y‑coordinate of the vertex of an upwardly oriented parabola.  (pp. 242, 246)
minor axis  
  The shorter axis in an ellipse.  The length of the semi-minor axis, the distance from the center to the end of the minor axis, is represented by b in the general equation.  (pp. 574, 576) See “ellipse.”
multiplicative inverse   
  The multiplicative inverse for a non-zero number is the number we can multiply by to get the multiplicative identity, 1.  For example, for the number 5, the multiplicative inverse is pic;  for the number picthe multiplicative inverse is pic.  The multiplicative inverse for a complex number, such as 3 − i, ispic. The multiplicative inverse for a square matrix is the matrix we can multiply by to get the identity matrix.  (pp. 364, 366)
multiplicative inverse   
  The multiplicative inverse for a non-zero number is the number we can multiply by to get the multiplicative identity, 1.  For example, for the number 5, the multiplicative inverse is ;  for the number the multiplicative inverse is .  The multiplicative inverse for a complex number, such as 3 − i, is. The multiplicative inverse for a square matrix is the matrix we can multiply by to get the identity matrix.  (pp. 364, 366)
multiplier   
  In a geometric sequence the number multiplied times each term to get the next term is called the multiplier or the common ratio or generator.  The multiplier is also the number you can multiply by in order to increase or decrease an amount by a given percentage in one step.  For example, to increase a number by 4%, the multiplier is 1.04.  We would multiply the number by 1.04.  The multiplier for decreasing by 4% is 0.96.  (pp. 79, 80, 83, 86)
negative exponents   
  Raising a number to a negative exponent is the same as taking the reciprocal of the number. pic for  x ≠ 0.  (pp. 132, 148)
non-function  
  A relation that has more than one output for one or more of its inputs.  (pp. 197, 198)