IRRATIONAL vs REASONLESS: NOUN
- A real number that can not be expressed as the quotient of two integers, an irrational number.
- A prime number.
- In mathematics, an irrational number, that is, the mark of a cut which separates all rational numbers into two classes, the first having no greatest number, the second no least.
- That which is devoid of reason, as one of the lower animals.
- An irrational number.
- N/A
IRRATIONAL vs REASONLESS: ADJECTIVE
- Not consistent with or using reason
- Not endowed with reason.
- Affected by loss of usual or normal mental clarity; incoherent, as from shock.
- Marked by a lack of accord with reason or sound judgment.
- Being a syllable in Greek and Latin prosody whose length does not fit the metric pattern.
- Being a metric foot containing such a syllable.
- Of or relating to an irrational number.
- Not rational; void of reason or understanding.
- Not according to reason; having no rational basis; clearly contrary to reason; easily disproved by reasoning; absurd; -- of assertions and beliefs.
- Not capable of being exactly expressed by an integral number, nor by a ratio of integral numbers; surd; -- said especially of roots. See Surd.
- Not rational; unfounded or nonsensical.
- Of a real number, that cannot be written as the ratio of two integers.
- Real but not expressible as the quotient of two integers
- Lacking reason or purpose
- Void of reason; not warranted or supported by reason; unreasonable.
- Destitute of reason.
- Not marked by the use of reason
- Not endowed with the capacity to reason
- Having no justifying cause or reason
IRRATIONAL vs REASONLESS: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Not rational; without the faculty of reason; void of understanding; unreasoning.
- Without the quality of reason; contrary to reason; illogical; unreasonable: as, irrational motives; an irrational project.
- In mathematics: In arithmetic, not capable of being exactly expressed by a vulgar fraction, proper or improper; surd.
- In translations of Euclid, and cognate writings, at once incommensurable with the assumed unit and not having its square commensurable with that of the unit. This is the peculiar meaning given by Euclid to α%27λογος, though Plato uses it in sense , above.
- In algebra, noting a quantity involving a variable raised to a fractional power; or. in a wider sense, noting a quantity not rational, not a sum of products of constants and of variables into one another or into themselves.
- In Greek prosody, incapable of measurement in terms of the fundamental or primary time or metrical unit.
- Not marked or justified by reason; senseless; causeless; unwarranted.
- Deficient in reason or judgment; lacking in good sense; unreasoning.
- Lacking the faculty of reason; irrational, as an animal.
IRRATIONAL vs REASONLESS: RELATED WORDS
- Unjustified, Irresponsible, Perverse, Insane, Rational, Illogical, Reasonless, Yellow, Blind, Jaundiced, Superstitious, Incoherent, Unreasoning, Unreasonable, Nonrational
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IRRATIONAL vs REASONLESS: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Unjustified, Irresponsible, Perverse, Insane, Rational, Illogical, Reasonless, Yellow, Blind, Jaundiced, Superstitious, Incoherent, Unreasoning, Unreasonable, Nonrational
- N/A
IRRATIONAL vs REASONLESS: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- So is there a magic answer about what exactly makes us irrational, and how those solutions designed for irrational humans are different?
- When two irrational numbers are multiplied or divided, the product is sometimes rational and sometimes irrational.
- When an irrational number and a rational number are added or subtracted, the sum is irrational.
- The product of a rational number and an irrational number is SOMETIMES irrational.
- When the square root of an irrational number is taken, does it have to be irrational?
- Irrational love and irrational hate jostling together in the heart of that tormented man.
- The product of two irrational numbers, in some cases, will be irrational.
- Prove or disprove that the product of two irrational numbers is irrational.
- Predictably Irrational, behavioral economist Dan Ariely claims that irrational.
- The sum of an irrational number and an irrational number is irrational.
- N/A
IRRATIONAL vs REASONLESS: QUESTIONS
- Did the Pythagoreans believe in irrational numbers?
- Why were irrational numbers introduced in mathematics?
- Do religious motivated terrorists propagate irrational violence?
- What operations are irrational numbers closed under?
- Should irrational exuberance be compulsory reading?
- Are irrational numbers closed under multiplication?
- Why do abolitionists consider punishment irrational?
- Can dividing an irrational number by another irrational number be an integer?
- What is the sum of two irrational numbers always irrational?
- Is the product of two irrational numbers always an irrational?
- N/A