incomposite
- 1Incomposite — In com*pos ite, a. [L. incompositus. See {Composite}.] Not composite; uncompounded; simple. [1913 Webster] {Incomposite numbers}. See {Prime numbers}, under {Prime}. [1913 Webster] … 
- 2Incomposite numbers — Incomposite In com*pos ite, a. [L. incompositus. See {Composite}.] Not composite; uncompounded; simple. [1913 Webster] {Incomposite numbers}. See {Prime numbers}, under {Prime}. [1913 Webster] … 
- 3incomposite numbers — plural noun Prime numbers • • • Main Entry: ↑incomposite … 
- 4incomposite — a. 1. Uncompounded, unmixed, simple. 2. (Arith.) Prime … 
- 5incomposite — in·composite … 
- 6incomposite — (|)in, ən+ adjective Etymology: Latin incompositus, from in in (I) + compositus, past participle of componere to put together more at compose 1. : lacking separable or distinguishable parts 2. of a number : prime … 
- 7Octave species — In early Greek music theory, an octave species (eide diapason) is a sequence of incomposite intervals (ditones, minor thirds, whole tones, semitones of various sizes, or quarter tones) making up a complete octave (Barbera 1984, 231–32). The… … 
- 8Tritone — For other uses, see Tritone (disambiguation). tritone Inverse tritone Name Other names augmented fourth, diminished fifth Abbreviation TT Size … 
- 9Curve — For other uses, see Curve (disambiguation). A parabola, a simple example of a curve In mathematics, a curve (also called a curved line in older texts) is, generally speaking, an object similar to a line but which is not required to be straight.… … 
- 10Sainte Ninnoc — Santez Nenneg Santes Gwengustle abbesse fondatrice du double monastère de Lannenec et de la paroisse de Ploemeur Naissance vers 435 Bretagne insulaire, actuel Pays de Galles Décès … 
 
						