sum+total

  • 101Total bases — In baseball statistics, total bases refers to the number of bases a player has gained with hits, i.e. the sum of his/her hits weighted by 1 for a single, 2 for a double, 3 for a triple and 4 for a home run.Only bases attained from hits count… …

    Wikipedia

  • 102Total pressure — The term total pressure may refer to:* The pressure in a mixture of ideal gases, sum of each gas partial pressure * The Bernoilli pressure, the sum of stagnation pressure and hydrostatic pressure difference …

    Wikipedia

  • 103sum up — Synonyms and related words: abbreviate, abridge, abstract, add up, battologize, bob, boil down, capsulize, cast up, cipher up, clip, compress, condense, contract, count up, crop, curtail, cut, cut back, cut down, cut off short, cut short, detail …

    Moby Thesaurus

  • 104total — I. adjective Etymology: Middle English, from Anglo French, from Medieval Latin totalis, from Latin totus whole, entire Date: 14th century 1. comprising or constituting a whole ; entire < the total amount > 2. absolute, utter < a total failure …

    New Collegiate Dictionary

  • 105Total boron — The total boron (BT) is the sum of boron species in a solution. In the environment these species usually include boric acid and borate, for example:BT = [H2BO3−] + [H3BO3] where,BT is the total boron concentration [H2BO3−] is the dihydrogen&#8230; …

    Wikipedia

  • 106Total Utility — The aggregate level of satisfaction or fulfillment that a consumer receives through the consumption of a specific good or service. Each individual unit of a good or service has its own marginal utility, and the total utility is simply the sum of&#8230; …

    Investment dictionary

  • 107total — to•tal [[t]ˈtoʊt l[/t]] adj. n. v. taled, tal•ing (esp. brit.) talled, tal•ling. 1) constituting or comprising the whole; entire: the total expenditure[/ex] 2) of or pertaining to the whole of something: the total effect of a play[/ex] 3)&#8230; …

    From formal English to slang

  • 108sum up — verb Date: 15th century transitive verb 1. to be the sum of ; bring to a total < 10 victories summed up his record > 2. a. to present or show succinctly ; summarize < sum up the evidence presented > b …

    New Collegiate Dictionary

  • 109Sum of normally distributed random variables — In probability theory, if X and Y are independent random variables that are normally distributed, then X + Y is also normally distributed; i.e. if :X sim N(mu, sigma^2),and :Y sim N( u, au^2),and X and Y are independent, then:Z = X + Y sim N(mu + …

    Wikipedia

  • 110Sum-Of-The-Years' Digits — An accelerated method for calculating an asset s depreciation. This method takes the asset s expected life and adds together the digits for each year. So if the asset was expected to last for five years, the sum of the years&#8217; digits would&#8230; …

    Investment dictionary