rajar(transitive) - meaning and definition. What is rajar(transitive)
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What (who) is rajar(transitive) - definition

IN SET THEORY, A SET WHOSE ELEMENTS ARE ALL SUBSETS
Transitive class; Transitive closure (set); Hereditarily transitive set; Transitive (set theory); Transitive closure (sets)

Rajar, Khushab         
Rajar district khushab
Rajar is a village in Khushab district in the Punjab province of Pakistan. It is situated at about 15 km North-East side of Khushab city.
Transitive set         
In set theory, a branch of mathematics, a set A is called transitive if either of the following equivalent conditions hold:
Transitive alignment         
GRAMMATICAL CASE
Transitive case
In linguistic typology, transitive alignment is a type of morphosyntactic alignment used in a small number of languages in which a single grammatical case is used to mark both arguments of a transitive verb, but not with the single argument of an intransitive verb. Such a situation, which is quite rare among the world's languages, has also been called a double-oblique clause structure.

Wikipedia

Transitive set

In set theory, a branch of mathematics, a set A {\displaystyle A} is called transitive if either of the following equivalent conditions hold:

  • whenever x A {\displaystyle x\in A} , and y x {\displaystyle y\in x} , then y A {\displaystyle y\in A} .
  • whenever x A {\displaystyle x\in A} , and x {\displaystyle x} is not an urelement, then x {\displaystyle x} is a subset of A {\displaystyle A} .

Similarly, a class M {\displaystyle M} is transitive if every element of M {\displaystyle M} is a subset of M {\displaystyle M} .