mantissa [man-tis-uh] ExamplesWord Origin noun
- Mathematics. the decimal part of a common logarithm.Compare characteristic(def 3a).
- Obsolete. an addition of little or no importance, as to a literary work.
Origin of mantissa 1860–65; Latin, variant of mantisa addition, makeweight, said to be from Etruscan; logarithmic mantissa so called because it is additional to the characteristic or integral part (term introduced by H. Briggs) Examples from the Web for mantissa Historical Examples of mantissa
Linnæus, however, says that his plant came from India (Mantissa, p. 273).
Alphonse De Candolle
The integral part of a logarithm is called the index or characteristic, and the fractional part the mantissa.
Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 16, Slice 8
Various
Mantissa Plantarum, generum editionis sextæ et specierum editionis secundæ.
Lives of Eminent Zoologists, from Aristotle to Linnus
William MacGillivray
Linnæus has described this plant minutely in his Mantissa Plant, so that no doubt remains of its being his maritimus.
The Botanical Magazine, Vol. V
William Curtis
Linnæus originally confounded it with a similar plant, the Draba alpina, a mistake since rectified in his Mantissa Plant.
The Botanical Magazine, Vol. V
William Curtis
British Dictionary definitions for mantissa mantissa noun
- the fractional part of a common logarithm representing the digits of the associated number but not its magnitudethe mantissa of 2.4771 is .4771 Compare characteristic (def. 2a)
Word Origin for mantissa C17: from Latin: something added, of Etruscan origin Word Origin and History for mantissa n.
decimal part of a logarithm, 1865, from Latin mantisa “a worthless addition, makeweight,” perhaps a Gaulish word introduced into Latin via Etruscan (cf. Old Irish meit, Welsh maint “size”).
mantissa in Science mantissa [măn-tĭs′ə]
- The part of a logarithm to the base ten that is to the right of the decimal point. For example, if 2.749 is a logarithm, .749 is the mantissa. Compare characteristic.