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Maths Glossary of Terms Term analogue clock angle anticlockwise array axis of symmetry bar chart binary operation block graph capacity cardinal number Carroll diagram chart chronological Description A clock usually with 12 equal divisions labelled ‘clockwise’ from the top 12, 1, 2, 3 and so on up to 11 to represent hours. An angle is a measure of rotation. In the opposite direction from the normal direction of travel of the hands of an analogue clock. An ordered collection of counters, numbers etc. in rows and columns. A line about which a geometrical figure, or shape, is symmetrical or about which a geometrical shape or figure is reflected in order to produce a symmetrical shape or picture. A format for representing statistical information. Bars, of equal width, represent frequencies and the lengths of the bars are proportional to the frequencies (and often equal to the frequencies). Sometimes called bar graph. The bars may be vertical or horizontal depending on the orientation of the chart. A rule for combining two numbers in the set to produce a third also in the set. Addition, subtraction, multiplication and division of real numbers are all binary operations. A simple format for representing statistical information. One block represents one observation. Example: A birthday graph where each child places one block, or colours one square, to represent himself / herself in the month in which he or she was born. Capacity – the volume of a material (typically liquid or air) held in a vessel or container. Units include litres, decilitres, millilitres; cubic centimetres (cm3) and cubic metres (m3). A litre is equivalent to 1000 cm3. A cardinal number denotes quantity, as opposed to an ordinal number which denotes position within a series. 1, 2, 5, 23 are examples of cardinal numbers First (1st), second (2nd), third (3rd) etc denote position in a series, and are ordinals. A sorting diagram named after Lewis Carroll, author and mathematician, in which numbers (or objects) are classified as having a certain property or not having that property Example: Use the diagram below to classify all the integers from 1 to 33 Another word for a table or graph Relating to events that occur in a time ordered sequence. clockwise column graph concrete objects consecutive diagram difference digit digital clock edge equivalent fractions even number face inverse operations mass missing number problems multiple number bond number line number sentence number square numeral ordinal number partition pattern pictogram In the direction in which the hands of an analogue clock travel. A bar graph where the bars are presented vertically. Objects that can be handled and manipulated to support understanding of the structure of a mathematical concept. Materials such as Dienes (Base 10 materials), Cuisenaire, Numicon, pattern blocks are all examples of concrete objects. Following in order. Consecutive numbers are adjacent in a count. Examples: 5, 6, 7 are consecutive numbers. A picture, a geometric figure or a representation. In mathematics (as distinct from its everyday meaning), difference means the numerical difference between two numbers or sets of objects and is found by comparing the quantity of one set of objects with another. e.g. the difference between 12 and 5 is 7; 12 is 5 more than 7 or 7 is 5 fewer than 12. Difference is one way of thinking about subtraction and can, in some circumstances, be a more helpful image for subtraction than ‘take-away’ – e.g. 102 - 98 One of the symbols of a number system most commonly the symbols 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 and 9. Examples: the number 29 is a 2-digit number; there are three digits in 2.95. The position or place of a digit in a number conveys its value. A clock that displays the time as hours and minutes passed, usually since midnight. Example: four thirty in the afternoon is displayed as 16:30. A line segment, joining two vertices of a figure. A line segment formed by the intersection of two plane surfaces. Examples: a square has four edges; and a cuboid has twelve edges. Fractions with the same value as another. For example: 4/8, 5/10, 8/16 are all equivalent fractions and all are equal to ½. An integer that is divisible by 2. One of the flat surfaces of a solid shape. Example: a cube has six faces; each face being a square Operations that are opposites of each other. Examples: addition and subtraction are inverse operations. Multiplication and division are inverse operations A characteristic of a body, relating to the amount of matter within it. Mass differs from weight, the force with which a body is attracted towards the earth’s centre. Whereas, under certain conditions, a body can become weightless, mass is constant. In a constant gravitational field weight is proportional to mass. A problem of the type 7 = ☐ − 9 often used as an introduction to algebra. A number that is in the times table of a given number. Example: 14, 49 and 70 are all multiples of 7 because 14 = 7 x 2, 49 = 7 x 7 and 70 = 7 x 10. A pair of numbers with a particular total, e.g. number bonds for ten are all pairs of whole numbers with the total 10. A line where numbers are represented by points upon it. A mathematical sentence involving numbers. Examples: 3 + 6 = 9 and 9 > 3 A square grid in which cells are numbered in order. A symbol used to denote a number. The Roman numerals I, V, X, L, C, D and M represent the numbers one, five, ten, fifty, one hundred, five hundred and one thousand. The Arabic numerals 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 and 9 are used in the Hindu-Arabic system giving numbers in the form that is widely used today. A term that describes a position within an ordered set. Example: first, second, third, fourth … twentieth etc. 1. To separate a set into subsets. 2. To split a number into component parts. Example: the two-digit number 38 can be partitioned into 30 + 8 or 19 + 19. A systematic arrangement of numbers, shapes or other elements according to a rule. A format for representing statistical information. Suitable pictures, symbols or icons are used to represent objects. For large numbers one symbol may represent a number of objects and a part symbol then represents a rough proportion of the number. pictorial representations place value product property quarter turn repeated addition rotation rule sequence share (equally) sign sort sum symbol symmetry table tally total turn unit vertex weight Pictorial representations enable learners to use pictures and images to represent the structure of a mathematical concept. The pictorial representation may build on the familiarity with concrete objects. E.g. a square to represent a Dienes ‘flat’ (representation of the number 100). Children may interpret pictorial representations provided to them or create a pictorial representation themselves to help solve a mathematical problem. The value of a digit that relates to its position or place in a number. Example: in 1482 the digits represent 1 thousand, 4 hundreds, 8 tens and 2 ones respectively. The result of multiplying one number by another. Example: The product of 2 and 3 is 6 since 2 × 3 = 6. Any attribute. Example: One property of a square is that all its sides are equal. A rotation through 90º or a right angle turn. The process of repeatedly adding the same number or amount. One model for multiplication. Example 5 + 5 + 5 + 5 = 5 x 4. In 2-D, a transformation of the whole plane which turns about a fixed point, the centre of rotation. Generally a procedure for carrying out a process. In the context of patterns and sequences a rule, expressed in words or algebraically, summarises the pattern or sequence and can be used to generate or extend it. A succession of terms formed according to a rule. There is a definite relation between one term and the next and between each term and its position in the sequence. Example: 1, 4, 9, 16, 25 etc. One model for the process of division. A symbol used to denote an operation. Examples: addition sign +, subtraction sign −, multiplication sign ×, division sign ÷, equals sign = etc. To classify a set of entities into specified categories. The result of one or more additions. A letter, numeral or other mark that represents a number, an operation or another mathematical idea. Example: L (Roman symbol for fifty), > (is greater than). A plane figure has symmetry if the effect of the reflection or rotation produces an identical-looking figure in the same position.. An orderly arrangement of information, numbers or letters usually in rows and columns. Make marks to represent objects counted; usually by drawing vertical lines and crossing the fifth count with a horizontal or diagonal strike through. A Tally chart is a table representing a count using a Tally 1. The aggregate. Example: the total population - all in the population. 2. The sum found by adding. A rotation about a point: a quarter turn is a rotation of 90°. A half turn is a rotation of 180°, a whole turn is a rotation of 360°. A standard used in measuring e.g. the metre is a unit of length; the degree is a unit of turn/angle, etc. The point at which two or more lines intersect. Plural: vertices. In everyday English weight is often confused with mass. In mathematics, and physics, the weight of a body is the force exerted on the body by the gravity of the earth, or any other gravitational body. English Glossary of Terms Term adjective Description The surest way to identify adjectives is by the ways they can be used: before a noun, to make the noun’s meaning more specific (i.e. to modify the noun), or after the verb be, as its complement. adverb The surest way to identify adverbs is by the ways they can be used: they can modify a verb, an adjective, another adverb or even a whole clause. apostrophe Apostrophes have two completely different uses: showing the place of missing letters (e.g. I’m for I am) marking possessives (e.g. Hannah’s mother). A compound word contains at least two root words joined to make a new word; e.g. whiteboard, superman. A conjunction links two words or phrases together. There are two main types of conjunctions: co-ordinating conjunctions (e.g. and) link two words or phrases together as an equal pair subordinating conjunctions (e.g. when) introduce a subordinate clause. compound, compounding conjunction/ joining word Example The pupils did some really good work. [adjective used before a noun, to modify it] Their work was good. [adjective used after the verb be, as its complement] Usha soon started snoring loudly. That match was really exciting! We don’t get to play games very often. Fortunately, it didn’t rain. I’m going out and I won’t be long. [showing missing letters] Hannah’s mother went to town in Justin’s car. [marking possessives] blackbird, blow-dry, bookshop, icecream, English teacher, inkjet, one-eyed, bone-dry, baby-sit, daydream James bought a bat and ball. [links the words bat and ball as an equal pair] Kylie is young but she can kick the ball hard. [links two clauses as an equal pair] Everyone watches when Kyle does backflips. [introduces a subordinate clause] Joe can’t practise kicking because he’s injured. [introduces a subordinate clause] co-ordinate, co-ordination digraph grapheme graphemephoneme correspondences (GPC) homophone Words or phrases are co-ordinated if they are linked as an equal pair by a co-ordinating conjunction (i.e. and, but, or). In the examples on the right, the co-ordinated elements are shown in bold, and the conjunction is underlined. The difference between co-ordination and subordination is that, in subordination, the two linked elements are not equal. A type of grapheme where two letters represent one phoneme. Sometimes, these two letters are not next to one another; this is called a split digraph A letter, or combination of letters, that corresponds to a single phoneme within a word. The links between letters, or combinations of letters (graphemes) and the speech sounds (phonemes) that they represent. In the English writing system, graphemes may correspond to different phonemes in different words. Two different words are homophones if they sound exactly the same when pronounced. Susan and Amra met in a café. [links the words Susan and Amra as an equal pair] They talked and drank tea for an hour. [links two clauses as an equal pair] Susan got a bus but Amra walked. [links two clauses as an equal pair] Not co-ordination: They ate before they met. [before introduces a subordinate clause] The digraph ea in each The digraph sh in shed The split digraph i–e in line The grapheme t in the words ten, bet and ate corresponds to the phoneme /t/. The grapheme ph in the word dolphin corresponds to the phoneme /f/. The grapheme s corresponds to the phoneme /s/ in the word see, but… …it corresponds to the phoneme /z/ in the word easy. hear, here some, sum noun The surest way to identify nouns is by the ways they can be used after determiners such as the: for example, most nouns will fit into the frame “The __ matters/matter.” Nouns may be classified as common (e.g. boy, day) or proper (e.g. Ivan, Wednesday), noun phrase A noun phrase is a phrase with a noun as its head, e.g. some foxes, foxes with bushy tails. Our dog bit the burglar on his behind! My big brother did an amazing jump on his skateboard. Actions speak louder than words. a book, two chocolates, one day, fewer ideas, money, some chocolate, less imagination , Marilyn, London, Wednesday Adult foxes can jump. [adult modifies foxes, so adult belongs to the noun phrase] Almost all healthy adult foxes in this area can jump. [all the other words help to modify foxes, so they all belong to the noun phrase] past tense phoneme phrase Verbs in the past tense are commonly used to: talk about the past talk about imagined situations Most verbs take a suffix –ed, to form their past tense, but many commonly-used verbs are irregular. A phoneme is the smallest unit of sound that signals a distinct, contrasting meaning. For example: /t/ contrasts with /k/ to signal the difference between tap and cap /t/ contrasts with /l/ to signal the difference between bought and ball. It is this contrast in meaning that tells us there are two distinct phonemes at work. There are around 44 phonemes in English. A single phoneme may be represented in writing by one, two, three or four letters constituting a single grapheme. Tom and Chris showed me their new TV. Antonio went on holiday to Brazil. I wish I had a puppy. A phrase is a group of words that are grammatically connected so that they stay together, and that expand a single word, called the ‘head’. The phrase is a noun phrase if its head is a noun, a preposition phrase if its head is a preposition, and so on; but if the head is a verb, the phrase is called a clause. Phrases can be made up of other phrases. She waved to her mother. [a noun phrase, with the noun mother as its The word cat has three letters and three phonemes. The word catch has five letters and three phonemes. The word caught has six letters and three phonemes. head] She waved to her mother. [a preposition phrase, with the preposition to as its head] She waved to her mother. [a clause, with the verb waved as its head] dogs, boxes, mice plural A plural noun normally has a suffix –s or –es and means ‘more than one’. possessive apostrophe A noun followed by an apostrophe, with or without s Tariq’s book The boys’ arrival prefix A prefix is added at the beginning of a word in order to turn it into another word. Contrast suffix. Verbs in the present tense are commonly used to: talk about the present talk about the future. overtake, disappear present tense They may take a suffix –s (depending on the subject). Jamal goes to the pool every day. He can swim. The bus arrives at three. My friends are coming to play. Punctuation includes any conventional features of writing other than spelling and general layout: the standard punctuation marks . , ; : ? ! - – ( ) “ ” ‘ ’ , and also word-spaces, capital letters, apostrophes, paragraph breaks and bullet points. One important role of punctuation is to indicate sentence boundaries. Morphology breaks words down into root words, which can stand alone, and suffixes or prefixes which can’t. For example, help is the root word for other words in its word family such as helpful and helpless, and helping. Compound words (e.g. helpdesk) contain two or more root words. When looking in a dictionary, we sometimes have to look for the root word (or words) of the word we are interested in. “I’m going out, Usha, and I won’t be long,” Mum said. A sentence is a group of words which are grammatically connected to each other but not to any words outside the sentence. The form of a sentence’s main clause shows whether it is being used as a statement, a question, a command or an exclamation. A sentence may consist of a single clause or it may contain several clauses held together by subordination or co-ordination. John went to his friend’s house. He stayed there till tea-time. You are my friend. [statement] Are you my friend? [question] Be my friend! [command] What a good friend you are! Standard English can be recognised by the use of a very small range of forms such as those books, I did it and I wasn’t doing anything (rather than their non-Standard equivalents). It is the variety of English which is used, with only minor variation, as a major world language. Some people use Standard English all the time. The aim of the national curriculum is that everyone should be able to use Standard English as needed in writing and in relatively formal speaking. I did it because they were not willing to undertake any more work on those houses. [formal Standard English] I did it cos they wouldn’t do any more work on those houses. [casual Standard subordinate clause A clause which is subordinate to some other part of the same sentence is a subordinate clause; for example, in The apple that I ate was sour, the clause that I ate is subordinate to apple (which it modifies). Subordinate clauses contrast with coordinate clauses as in It was sour but looked very tasty. That’s the street where Ben lives. He watched her as she disappeared. suffix A suffix is an ‘ending’, used at the end of one word to turn it into another word. Unlike root words, suffixes cannot stand on their own as a complete word. Contrast prefix call – called teach – teacher terror – terrorise syllable A syllable sounds like a beat in a word. Syllables consist of at least one vowel, and possibly one or more consonants. Cat has one syllable. Fairy has two syllables. Hippopotamus has five syllables. punctuation root word sentence Standard English played [the root word is play] unfair [the root word is fair] football [the root words are foot and ball] [exclamation] English] I done it cos they wouldn’t do no more work on them houses. [casual nonStandard English] tense In English, tense is the choice between present and past verbs, which is special because it is signalled by inflections and normally indicates differences of time. The simple tenses (present and past) may be combined in English with the perfect and progressive. He studies. [present tense – present time] He studied yesterday. [past tense – past time] He studies tomorrow, or else! [present tense – future time] He may study tomorrow. [present tense + infinitive – future time] He plans to study tomorrow. [present tense + infinitive – future time] trigraph A type of grapheme where three letters represent one phoneme. High, pure, patch, hedge verb The surest way to identify verbs is by the ways they can be used: they can usually have a tense, either present or past (see also future). He lives in Birmingham. [present tense] The teacher wrote a song for the class. [past tense] He likes chocolate. [present tense; not an action] He knew my father. [past tense; not an action] word A word is a unit of grammar: it can be selected and moved around relatively independently, but cannot easily be split. In punctuation, words are normally separated by word spaces. Sometimes, a sequence that appears grammatically to be two words is collapsed into a single written word, indicated with a hyphen or apostrophe (e.g. well-built, he’s). headteacher or head teacher [can be written with or without a space] I’m going out. 9.30 am