trivial$85294$ - meaning and definition. What is trivial$85294$
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What (who) is trivial$85294$ - definition

DESCRIPTION TO WHAT EXTENT A MATHEMATICAL STATEMENT OR COMPLICATION CAN BE DISREGARDED DUE TO SIMPLICITY
Nontrivial; Non trivial; Non-trivial; Trivial solution; Trivial (mathematics); Trivial case

Unlink         
LINK THAT CONSISTS OF FINITELY MANY UNLINKED UNKNOTS
Trivial Link; Trivial link; Unlinked; L0 link
·vt To separate or undo, as links; to Uncoil; to Unfasten.
unlink         
LINK THAT CONSISTS OF FINITELY MANY UNLINKED UNKNOTS
Trivial Link; Trivial link; Unlinked; L0 link
¦ verb separate; detach.
Trivial Pursuit         
  • Board and pieces of Trivial Pursuit.
  • Trivial Pursuit Party is a simplified edition of Trivial Pursuit where every correct answer earns the player a wedge, thus making the game time shorter.
  • A ''Trivial Pursuit'' playing piece, with all six wedges filled
BOARD GAME
Trivial pursuit; Trivial pursuits; Trivial Pursuits; Chris Haney(Trivial Pursuit); Trivial Pursuit Turbo
Trivial Pursuit is a board game in which winning is determined by a player's ability to answer general knowledge and popular culture questions. Players move their pieces around a board, the squares they land on determining the subject of a question they are asked from a card (from six categories including "history" and "science and nature").

Wikipedia

Triviality (mathematics)

In mathematics, the adjective trivial is often used to refer to a claim or a case which can be readily obtained from context, or an object which possesses a simple structure (e.g., groups, topological spaces). The noun triviality usually refers to a simple technical aspect of some proof or definition. The origin of the term in mathematical language comes from the medieval trivium curriculum, which distinguishes from the more difficult quadrivium curriculum. The opposite of trivial is nontrivial, which is commonly used to indicate that an example or a solution is not simple, or that a statement or a theorem is not easy to prove.

The judgement of whether a situation under consideration is trivial or not depends on who considers it since the situation is obviously true for someone who has sufficient knowledge or experience of it while to someone who has never seen this, it may be even hard to be understood so not trivial at all. And there can be an argument about how quickly and easily a problem should be recognized for the problem to be treated as trivial. So, triviality is not a universally agreed property in mathematics and logic.