Divisibility

  • 121Salmon P. Chase — Salmon Portland Chase 6th Chief Justice of the United States …

    Wikipedia

  • 122List of statistics topics — Please add any Wikipedia articles related to statistics that are not already on this list.The Related changes link in the margin of this page (below search) leads to a list of the most recent changes to the articles listed below. To see the most… …

    Wikipedia

  • 123Reflexive relation — In mathematics, a reflexive relation is a binary relation on a set for which every element is related to itself, i.e., a relation on S where x x holds true for every x in S.[1] For example, could be is equal to . Contents 1 Related terms 2… …

    Wikipedia

  • 124Symmetric relation — In mathematics, a binary relation R over a set X is symmetric if it holds for all a and b in X that if a is related to b then b is related to a .In mathematical notation, this is::forall a, b in X, a R b Rightarrow ; b R a.Note: symmetry is not… …

    Wikipedia

  • 125Transitive relation — In mathematics, a binary relation R over a set X is transitive if whenever an element a is related to an element b , and b is in turn related to an element c , then a is also related to c . Transitivity is a key property of both partial order… …

    Wikipedia

  • 12611 (number) — Number|number = 11 range = 10s cardinal = eleven ordinal = th ordinal text = numeral = undecimal factorization = prime prime = divisor = 1, 11 roman = XI unicode = greek prefix = (from Greek) latin prefix = (from Latin) bin = 1011 oct = 102 duo …

    Wikipedia

  • 1273 (number) — Three and 3rd redirect here. For other uses, see Third (disambiguation). This article is about the number. For the year, see 3. For other uses, see 3 (disambiguation). 3 −1 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 → …

    Wikipedia

  • 128Highly composite number — This article is about numbers having many divisors. For numbers factorized only to powers of 2, 3, 5 and 7 (also named 7 smooth numbers), see Smooth number. A highly composite number (HCN) is a positive integer with more divisors than any… …

    Wikipedia