View Full Version : trigonometry functions
hello everyone,
well my story is a bit complicated..
since i've entered school i was french educated,
now i'm in my last year and i'm moving to an english school
and i'm in the field GS (general sciences)
the reason for moving schools is that i'm travelling to canada next year
to study "astrophysics"..
anyway my question is:
when i was looking at the trigonometry chapter,
i noticed the SEC and the CSC functions
which i discovered their meanings: secx= 1/cosx
and cscx= 1/sinx
and i was astonished because there's no SEC and CSC in french.
i asked grade 11 students in english schools, they told me that they know it
and i asked french educated students in grade 12.. but they don't know it.
are these functions only used in english?
thanks for any help
joe
Welcome to PF!
These function-names are also used in Scandinavia, and in Germany as well, I believe.
devious_
Sep8-04, 12:42 PM
And in all the Arabic countries.
thanks,
you were so cooperative
regards,
joe
And in all the Arabic countries.
i live in lebanon (arabic country)
and we don't use them.
These function-names are also used in Scandinavia, and in Germany as well, I believe.
They are pretty much non-existant in Sweden.
They are pretty much non-existant in Sweden.
Hmm..the Swedes always have their own, strange incomprehensible ways of doing things..
it's so wierd
it's all about contradictions
anyway i would like to talk with experts about maths..
maybe get their help sometimes..
my msn address is:
a1r7t0i6f1i9c8i7a1l7i0n6t1e9l8l7i1g7e0n6c1e@hotmai l.com
joe
Hmm..the Swedes always have their own, strange incomprehensible ways of doing things..
Ah yes, writing 1/cos(x) instead of sec(x) is incomprehensible for you feeble-minded Norwegians...
;)
Ah yes, writing 1/cos(x) instead of sec(x) is incomprehensible for you feeble-minded Norwegians...
;)
FEEBLE-MINDED??
WE ARE MASTERS OF BOTH TECHNIQUES; BESIDES, YOU HAVEN'T GOT ANY OIL OR MERCHANT FLEET TO SPEAK OF!!
WE ARE MASTERS OF BOTH TECHNIQUES
You just said that "our" way was "incomprehensible". How typically Norwegian, you're all like John Kerry.
YOU HAVEN'T GOT ANY OIL OR MERCHANT FLEET TO SPEAK OF!!
At least we don't speak as odd as you do, era jäkla brusefåtöljer.
:P
Legend has it that brusefåtölj ("noisy chair", I suppose) is Norwegian for "toilet" (yes, I know it's not true).
Legend has it that brusefåtölj ("noisy chair", I suppose) is Norwegian for "toilet" (yes, I know it's not true).
Is this some kind of strange, Swedish compliment :confused:
After all, as is well known, Swedes still dump their bodily refuse in their backyards..
Integral
Sep8-04, 04:34 PM
Where's the Dane to complete this Scandinavian insult session?
It never occurred to me that the Sec and Csc, which are pretty rarely used BTW, were not universal!
matt grime
Sep8-04, 05:27 PM
I've a surname of Scandinavian descent, can I join in? However the only things I knew how to say in Danish was "hard boiled egg" (and some isolated words from Peter Hoeg novels), and I've forgotten that. You'd have to be incredibly thin skinned to find that insulting.
lol.. we are talking about trigs
don't forget ! :P
modmans2ndcoming
Sep10-04, 06:22 PM
i live in lebanon (arabic country)
and we don't use them.
Lebanon has a French influence :-)
Wasn't the Scandinavian Trigva Lie the first Secretary General of the U.N.? ;-)
HallsofIvy
Sep11-04, 11:28 AM
Not to mention that Lie itself is a wonderful mathematics name. Any relation to Sophus Lie?
arildno
Sep11-04, 11:46 AM
Not to mention that Lie itself is a wonderful mathematics name. Any relation to Sophus Lie?
No; Lie is a Norwegian surname about as common as Hill in English
(Lie means, BTW, "hill/hillside")
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