Maths Terms for 11-13 Yr Olds
Note: You may download the entries for this glossary here. If you wish to use this in your own Moodle course, first make a blank glossary and then follow the instructions for importing glossary entries here.
James says: "This is glossary of terms for UK KS3 Maths,[ages 11-13] taken Works quite well with a 'random glossary entry' html block on a main course page since the definitions are in a small font size.
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CircularIn the form of a circle; perfectly round in two-dimensions. | |
CircumferenceThe length of a circle (its perimeter). If the radius of a circle is r units, and the diameter d units, then the circumference is 2 ?r, or ?d units. For a sphere the circumference is the length of a 'great circle' on the sphere - this is like the equator on our planet. | |
ClockwiseIn the direction in which the hands of clock travel, and the direction bearings and angles are usually measured. Anti-clockwise or counter-clockwise are terms used for the opposite direction. | |
Co-ordinateA position in 2D or 3D space, represented by numbers, letters or both. See 'Cartesian co-ordinates'. | |
CoefficientOften used for the numerical coefficient. More generally, a factor of an algebraic term. Example: in the term 4xy, 4 is the numerical coefficient of xy but x is also the coefficient of 4y and y is the coefficient of 4x. | |
Common FractionA fraction where the numerator and denominator are both integers. Also known as a simple or vulgar fraction. Contrast with a compound or complex fraction where the numerator or denominator or both contain fractions. See also decimal fraction. | |
Complementary NumbersTwo angles with the sum of 90 degrees . | |
Compound MeasuresMeasures with two or more dimensions. Examples: speed calculated as distance ÷ time; density calculated as mass ÷ volume; car efficiency measured as litres per 100 kilometres; and rate of inflation measured as percentage increase in prices. | |
ConcaveAdjective to describe a line or surface curving inwards (like the shape of a cave). A concave polygon has at least one re-entrant angle i.e. one interior angle greater than 180 degrees . | |