How Do You Pronounce Complex Mathematical Expressions in English?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around the pronunciation of complex mathematical expressions in English, highlighting the difficulty in finding accurate verbal representations. The original poster seeks assistance in pronouncing various mathematical notations, such as "an," absolute values, integrals, and derivatives. Participants provide examples of how to articulate these expressions correctly, emphasizing clarity and precision in mathematical language. The conversation also touches on the challenges faced when seeking help from English teachers unfamiliar with mathematical terminology. Overall, the thread serves as a resource for those needing guidance on pronouncing mathematical expressions effectively.
SalomeH
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I apologise for choosing not so related topic, but I could'n find better one. I will have to read some math expressions in English for audience and I'm not sure how to say it. And when I ask English teacher, they don't know what it means in the first place and can't give me any advise either. Could you please help me?

Example: a2 = a squared
a×b = a cross b
a+b = a plus b etc.

These I don't know for sure how to say:
an
|r1-r2|
abf(x)dx
d2y/dx2 (second derivative?)
∂y/∂x
a/b
 
Mathematics news on Phys.org
1. a to the (power of) n OR a to the nth
2. Absolute value of the difference of r one and r two
3. Integral from a to b of f of x dx
4. Second derivative of y with respect to x
5. Partial derivative of y with respect to x
6. a over b
 
Thank you very much!
 
Millennial said:
2. Absolute value of the difference of r one and r two

Looks like the OP intended vectors here, so I would say "modulus of r one minus r two".
 
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