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abstract number

noun

, Mathematics.
  1. a number that does not designate the quantity of any particular kind of thing.


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Word History and Origins

Origin of abstract number1

First recorded in 1550–60
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Example Sentences

Gross domestic product, the economy’s total output of goods and services, remains “an abstract number” to ordinary people, and the ruble’s exchange rate is less of a symbol than it used to be because most people can’t travel and there are fewer imported goods to buy, Kluge said.

Shortly before his death, he warned of a world where the individual “has lost his individuality and become a mere abstract number in the bureau of statistics.”

“Even if it means fewer programs, we want to see them done well, so I don’t think any of us felt like it was useful to just talk about an abstract number.”

Over the next millennium, algebra evolved from the study of the nature of solutions to polynomial equations to the study of abstract number systems.

But an interesting question remains: How was I, a still-wet-behind-the-ears undergraduate in my third year of university study, able to learn to comfortably manipulate abstract number systems such as Galois’s fields in just a few short weeks?

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