&item1=Adjacent Side#The side of a right triangle beside the acute angle you are considering (which is not the hypotenuse).& &item2=Amplitude#The maximum distance of a relation above or below the axis of the curve.& &item3=Angle of Depression#The angle between a line and the horizontal axis, where the line is below the axis. In trigonometry you can consider it the angle looking down.& &item4=Angle of Inclination or Elevation#The angle between a line and the horizontal axis, where the line is above the axis. In trigonometry you can consider it the angle looking up.& &item5=Annuity, General#A loan or investment that has a payment plan.& &item6=Annuity, Ordinary#A loan or investment that has a payment frequency that matches the compounding period.& &item7=Axis of the Curve#The horizontal line half way between the maximum and minimum values. It is also called the midline. It is calculated by adding the maximum and minimum and dividing by 2.& &item8=Complex Trinomial#A quadratic function of the form seen in the formula for this term..& &item9=Compound Interest#Interest calculated on both the principal and the previous interest.& &item10=Compounding Period#The period of time where interest is calculated. For example, quarterly interest is calculated 4 times per year.& &item11=Cosine Law#A set of equations that relate the angles and sides of a triangle. Use these when you do not know two sides and an angle between them.& &item12=Cycle#One complete repeating unit in a behaviour that occurs over and over.& &item13=Decreasing Interval#A segment of a curve where the y-values are decreasing.& &item14=Difference of Squares#A binomial of the form seen in the formula for this term.& &item15=Discriminant#The radicand of the quadratic formula as seen in the formula for this term.& &item16=Domain#Domain is the set of x-values represented by the graph or the equation of a function.& &item17=Exponential Decay#A situation in which a quantity is modelled by an exponential function with a base between zero and one.& &item18=Exponential Function#A function involving a power with the independent variable in the exponent.& &item19=Exponential Growth#A situation in which a quantity is modelled by an exponential function with a base greater than one.& &item20=Factor#To express as things that multiply.& &item21=First Differences#The differences between successive y-values in a table of values.& &item22=Function#A relation where each input has only one (unique) output.& &item23=Future Value Formula#Used to calculate the future value of an investment or loan if the interest is compounded.& &item24=Half-Life#The amount of time required for a quantity to decay to half of its original value.& &item25=Horizontal Asymptote#A horizontal line that a function approaches but never reaches, as x becomes a large positive or large negative value.& &item26=Hypotenuse#The longest side of a right triangle.& &item27=Increasing Interval#A segment of a curve where the y-values are increasing.& &item28=Integers#The natural numbers including their negatives and zero: - ... -4, -3, -2, -1, 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, ...The symbol is I.& &item29=Intercepts#The x-values where the curve crosses the horizontal axis.& &item30=Interest Rate#The rate, in decimal form, divided by the number of times, per year, it is compounded.& &item31=Irrational Numbers#Non-repeating and non-terminating decimals like that seen in the formula for this term.& &item32=Maximum#The maximum of any function is simply the measure of the greatest y-value.& &item33=Minimum#The minimum of any function is simply the measure of the smallest y-value.& &item34=Natural Numbers#The natural counting numbers: 1, 2, 3, 4, ...The symbol is N.& &item35=Number of Compounding Periods#This is the number of times interest is calculated on the investment or loan. n = number of compounding periods per year x number of years.& &item36=Opposite Side#The side of a right triangle across from the acute angle you are considering (and is not the hypotenuse).& &item37=Perfect Square Trinomial#A quadratic function of the form seen in the formula for this term.& &item38=Period#The length of one complete cycle or repeating unit.& &item39=Periodic Behaviour#Behaviour that repeats itself.& &item40=Present Value Formula#A formula used to calculate the present value of an investment or loan if the interest is compounded.& &item41=Quadratic#A function that can be written in the form seen in the formula for this term.& &item42=Quadratic Formula#A formula used to find the roots (x-intercepts) of a quadratic equation.& &item43=Range#Range is the set of y-values represented by the graph or the equation of a function.& &item44=Rational Numbers#All numbers that can be written as fractions, including repeating and terminating decimals can all by written as fractions. This includes all natural numbers, whole numbers, and integers. Symbol is Q.& &item45=Real Numbers#All rational and irrational numbers. Symbol is R.& &item46=Rule of 72#An approximation used to calculate how long it would take for an investment to double at a certain interest rate.& &item47=Second Differences#The differences between successive First Differences in a table of values.& &item48=Simple Interest#Interest calculated only on the original principal.& &item49=Simple Trinomial#A quadratic function of the form seen in the formula for this term.& &item50=Sine Function#The function y = sin(x) or f(x) = sin(x). See the formula for this term.& &item51=Sine Law#A set of equations that relate the angles and sides of a triangle. Use these when you know two sides and the angle between them.& &item52=Standard Form of a Quadratic Equation#A quadratic of the form seen in the formula for this term.& &item53=Transformation#Applying an operation such as a reflection, rotation or translation to a mathematical relation.& &item54=Trigonometric Ratios#A set of equations relating the angles and sides of right angle triangles.& &item55=Vertex Form#A quadratic of the form seen in the formula for this term.& &item56=Vertical Line Test (VLT)#When a vertical line joins through two or more points on any part of a graph then the relation is not a function.& &item57=Whole Numbers#The natural numbers and zero: 0, 1, 2, 3, 4,... The symbol is W.& &item58=Zeros#The x-values where a relation crosses the x-axis.& &num_items=58& &itemsfile_loaded=1&