senary

English

Etymology

From the Latin sēnārius (consisting of six each), from sēnī (six each, six at a time) + -ārius (whence the English suffix -ary).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈsiːnəɹi/
  • Rhymes: -iːnəɹi
  • Homophone: scenery

Adjective

senary (not comparable)

  1. Of sixth rank or order.
    • 2001, Manish K. Gupta, David G. Glynn, and T. Aaron Gulliver, On Senary Simplex Codes, in Applied Algebra, Algebraic Algorithms and Error-Correcting Codes: proceedings of 14th International Symposium, Serdar Boztaş, Igor E. Shparlinski (eds.), page 112
      In particular, one can construct mixed binary/ternary codes via senary codes by applying the Chinese Gray map (see Example 1).
  2. (arithmetic) Of, pertaining to, or based on six.
    The senary fraction 0.2 is one-third, i.e. two-sixths.
    Synonym: sextal

Translations

Noun

senary (uncountable)

  1. (arithmetic) The numeral system which uses six as the base.

Translations

See also

Anagrams

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