How do you properly pronounce subscripts in physics equations?

  • Context: High School 
  • Thread starter Thread starter wrongusername
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Zero
wrongusername
Messages
58
Reaction score
0
How do you pronounce some variable with a subscript 0 attached to it, like "v0"? My first-semester physics professor pronounced it as something like "v nort," 2nd-semester prof said "v nut," and my current 3rd-semester prof says "v not" instead.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
It doesn't matter.
 
How about you just read it as-is, "V Sub-zero"?
Then you go on to V Scorpion, V Reptile, etc... Later on V Sektor and V Cyrax. For V Smoke you may need to indicate if it is the robotized version or not though.
Or you may chose not to index your variables with Lin Kuei members at all. V Liu Kang would demolish them all anyway.

:p
No, really, with a post like that, this answer could not be avoided at all.
But on a more serious note, I'd just read that notation "V zero"
 
georgir said:
How about you just read it as-is, "V Sub-zero"?
Then you go on to V Scorpion, V Reptile, etc... Later on V Sektor and V Cyrax. For V Smoke you may need to indicate if it is the robotized version or not though.
Or you may chose not to index your variables with Lin Kuei members at all. V Liu Kang would demolish them all anyway.

:p
No, really, with a post like that, this answer could not be avoided at all.
But on a more serious note, I'd just read that notation "V zero"

Sadly, I had exactly the same thought.
 
georgir said:
How about you just read it as-is, "V Sub-zero"?
Then you go on to V Scorpion, V Reptile, etc... Later on V Sektor and V Cyrax. For V Smoke you may need to indicate if it is the robotized version or not though.
Or you may chose not to index your variables with Lin Kuei members at all. V Liu Kang would demolish them all anyway.

:p
No, really, with a post like that, this answer could not be avoided at all.
But on a more serious note, I'd just read that notation "V zero"

Thanks for the laugh! lol :biggrin:
I remember one of my other professors do read it as "v zero," though the majority seem to prefer something like:

Amanheis said:

which does sound like what they all were trying to say. :-p
 
That's obviously pronounced "v null" to me. But then, I have to be different, don't I?

Banter aside, I looked at that and said "v null".
 
Char. Limit said:
That's obviously pronounced "v null" to me. But then, I have to be different, don't I?

Banter aside, I looked at that and said "v null".

But that sounds like http://www.thefreedictionary.com/venal" .
 
Last edited by a moderator:
I've heard it pronounced V-nought and V-zero. I usually pronounce it however my professor at the time pronounces it. I don't have my own pattern yet.
 
  • #10
I am a man of the V-sub-zero clan. Nought sounds too much like ought, as in .30/06
 
  • #11
It's naught. v zero is
 
  • #12
I've never really thought about this before, but it's curious that I pronounce a subscript v0 as "vee-naught", a zero on its own as "naught", and a zero before a decimal point 0.2 as "naught point two", but in almost all other contexts I pronounce a zero digit as "oh" (e.g. 306 = "three-oh-six").

But for some reason [itex]\aleph_0[/itex] is "aleph-null".
 
  • #13
Funny that now I know what it is, I prefer to call it "zero" instead. Dunno, "nought" just sounds... weird to me :smile:
 
  • #14
look at my name :)

μ0
 
  • #15
v_naught, naught is more than natural than zero
 
  • #16
V naught or "v sub zero"

but you have to say it almost like "veese of zero"

only "ob zero"

"veese ob zero"

or

"veese ob oh"
 
  • #17
Visaboh!
 
  • #18
v-sub-oh
v-not
 
  • #19
KalamMekhar said:
I am a man of the V-sub-zero clan. Nought sounds too much like ought, as in .30/06

Aught or ought: Same archaic word meaning 'nothing', apparently.

zero
aught
ought
naught
oh
null

the list grows.
 
  • #20
I think I use 'zero' with letters of the modern English alphabet, 'naught' with Greek symbols, and 'null' with Hebrew characters. :wink:
 
  • #21
Gokul43201 said:
'null' with Hebrew characters. :wink:

WTF. I've never thought about that before.

This is going to bother me for the rest of my life
 
  • #22
Gokul43201 said:
I think I use 'zero' with letters of the modern English alphabet, 'naught' with Greek symbols, and 'null' with Hebrew characters. :wink:

Huh? :smile: how would you write "naught" and "null"?
 
  • #23
wrongusername said:
Huh? :smile: how would you write "naught" and "null"?
All the same way.[itex]p_0[/itex] = "pee zero"

[itex]E_0[/itex] = "ee zero"

[itex]\mu_0[/itex] = "mu naught"

[itex]p_0[/itex] = "epsilon naught"

[itex]\aleph_0[/itex] = "aleph null" -> the generalization of that pronunciation to all Hebrew characters was a joke! I can't think of any others that I use.
 
  • #24
Gokul43201 said:
All the same way.


[itex]p_0[/itex] = "pee zero"

[itex]E_0[/itex] = "ee zero"

[itex]\mu_0[/itex] = "mu naught"

[itex]p_0[/itex] = "epsilon naught"

[itex]\aleph_0[/itex] = "aleph null" -> the generalization of that pronunciation to all Hebrew characters was a joke! I can't think of any others that I use.

Well, isn't there also a number using a Hebrew character pronounced "bet-null" or "beth-null"?
 
  • #25
I'm an Albertan. We pronounce "sub-zero" as "Brrrrr..."

I'm not sure if this is technically correct or not, but in my neck of the woods "naught" is a general term for "nothing", whereas "ought" refers specifically to the number zero.
 
  • #26
How would all the naught-y people pronounce v1 and so on then?
 
  • #27
georgir said:
How would all the naught-y people pronounce v1 and so on then?

"vee-one"
 
  • #28
Char. Limit said:
"vee-one"

Unless you were a member of the RAF, in which case you would pronounce it "buzz bomb"...
 

Similar threads

  • · Replies 6 ·
Replies
6
Views
6K
  • · Replies 1 ·
Replies
1
Views
2K
  • · Replies 2 ·
Replies
2
Views
2K
  • · Replies 7 ·
Replies
7
Views
2K
  • · Replies 4 ·
Replies
4
Views
2K
Replies
41
Views
11K
  • · Replies 21 ·
Replies
21
Views
6K
  • · Replies 6 ·
Replies
6
Views
4K
Replies
20
Views
4K
Replies
2
Views
985