Explement
[ek-spluh-muh nt] /ˈɛk splə mənt/
noun, Mathematics.
1.
the quantity by which an angle or an arc falls short of 360° or a circle.
Read Also:
- Explementary-angle
noun, Mathematics. 1. either of two angles that added together produce an angle of 360°.
- Expletive
[ek-spli-tiv] /ˈɛk splɪ tɪv/ noun 1. an interjectory word or expression, frequently profane; an exclamatory oath. 2. a syllable, word, or phrase serving to fill out. 3. Grammar. a word considered as regularly filling the syntactic position of another, as it in It is his duty to go, or there in There is nothing here. […]
- Expletively
[ek-spli-tiv] /ˈɛk splɪ tɪv/ noun 1. an interjectory word or expression, frequently profane; an exclamatory oath. 2. a syllable, word, or phrase serving to fill out. 3. Grammar. a word considered as regularly filling the syntactic position of another, as it in It is his duty to go, or there in There is nothing here. […]
- Expletory
[ek-spli-tiv] /ˈɛk splɪ tɪv/ noun 1. an interjectory word or expression, frequently profane; an exclamatory oath. 2. a syllable, word, or phrase serving to fill out. 3. Grammar. a word considered as regularly filling the syntactic position of another, as it in It is his duty to go, or there in There is nothing here. […]
- Explicable
[ek-spli-kuh-buh l, ik-splik-uh-buh l] /ˈɛk splɪ kə bəl, ɪkˈsplɪk ə bəl/ adjective 1. capable of being explained. /ˈɛksplɪkəbəl; ɪkˈsplɪk-/ adjective 1. capable of being explained adj. 1550s, from or on model of Latin explicabilis “capable of being unraveled, that may be explained,” from explicare (see explicit). Middle English had a verb expliken “explain, interpret” (mid-15c.).