mask negative - significado y definición. Qué es mask negative
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Qué (quién) es mask negative - definición

REAL NUMBER THAT IS STRICTLY LESS THAN ZERO
Negative numbers; Negative and nonnegative numbers; Positive and negative numbers; Antinumber; Negative negative; Negative Negative; Negative negative number; Negative negative numbers; Negative Negative number; Negative Negative numbers; Negative Negative Number; Negative Negative Numbers; Negative negative Number; Negative negative Numbers; Directed number; History of negative numbers; Negative and non-negative numbers; Negative Number; Minus number
  • A visual representation of the addition of positive and negative numbers. Larger balls represent numbers with greater magnitude.
  • Negative storey numbers in an elevator.
  • The number line
  • This thermometer is indicating a negative [[Fahrenheit]] temperature (−4 °F).

masked         
  • An American football player wearing a mask that protects his face from another player's hand
  • A Korean mask worn by a [[Talchum]] performer
  • A protective surgical mask
  • Golden masks excavated from the [[Kalmakareh Cave]] in [[Lorestan]], Iran, first half of first Millennium BC, [[National Museum of Iran]]
  • Asaro mudman]] holding mask, Papua New Guinea
  • recognition]]
  • A [[Peking opera]] mask
  •  access-date = February 26, 2016}}</ref>
  • Batak]] mask dance at a funeral feast in the [[Dutch East Indies]], 1930s
  • Kwakwaka'wakw ritual mask (painted wood, fiber, and cord)
  • Fang mask]] used for the ''ngil'' ceremony, an inquisitorial search for sorcerers. Wood, [[Gabon]], 19th century
  • Iranian surgical technologist with surgical mask
  • Masks of [[Cameroon]]
  • Anonymous]]'' wear Guy Fawkes masks while protesting against the [[Church of Scientology]], 2008, London
  • Vietnamese young people wear surgic masks after the [[COVID-19 pandemic]]
  • Makeup simulates a half-sided mask on this man for [[Halloween]]
  • The so-called '[[Mask of Agamemnon]]', a 16th-century BC mask discovered by [[Heinrich Schliemann]] in 1876 at [[Mycenae]], Greece, [[National Archaeological Museum, Athens]]
  • Mask of Shame]]"
  • Roman mosaic]], second century AD
  • [[Funeral mask]] of [[K'inich Janaab' Pakal]] at the [[National Museum of Anthropology (Mexico)]]
  • reusable filter mask]] worn by [[NYPD]] officer
  • Greek mask
  • Three photographs of the same [[noh]] mask of a woman show how her expression appears to change with a tilting of the head of the performer - to demonstrate the effect, the mask was affixed to a wall with constant lighting and only the camera was moved
  • Masked dancers at a [[tshechu]] festival, [[Bhutan]], 2013
  • A Venetian carnival mask
  • Aztec mask of [[Xiuhtecuhtli]], c. 1500, of [[Mixtec]]-Aztec provenance
  • Mask of [[Tengu]]
  • Shu]]
ANY FULL OR PARTIAL FACE COVERING, WHETHER CEREMONIAL, PROTECTIVE, DECORATIVE, OR USED AS DISGUISE
Masks; Masked; Masks (protective); Protective masks; Protective mask; Masks in theatre; Masks and theatre; Masks in ritual; Masks in ritual and theatre; Masks in theater and ritual; Ritual mask; SARS mask; SARS Masks; Swine flu mask; Theatre mask; Tribal mask; Flu mask; Face cover; Melanesian masks; Native American masks; SARS Mask; Face covering; Masked theatre
If someone is masked, they are wearing a mask.
Masked youths threw stones and fire-bombs.
ADJ
mask         
  • An American football player wearing a mask that protects his face from another player's hand
  • A Korean mask worn by a [[Talchum]] performer
  • A protective surgical mask
  • Golden masks excavated from the [[Kalmakareh Cave]] in [[Lorestan]], Iran, first half of first Millennium BC, [[National Museum of Iran]]
  • Asaro mudman]] holding mask, Papua New Guinea
  • recognition]]
  • A [[Peking opera]] mask
  •  access-date = February 26, 2016}}</ref>
  • Batak]] mask dance at a funeral feast in the [[Dutch East Indies]], 1930s
  • Kwakwaka'wakw ritual mask (painted wood, fiber, and cord)
  • Fang mask]] used for the ''ngil'' ceremony, an inquisitorial search for sorcerers. Wood, [[Gabon]], 19th century
  • Iranian surgical technologist with surgical mask
  • Masks of [[Cameroon]]
  • Anonymous]]'' wear Guy Fawkes masks while protesting against the [[Church of Scientology]], 2008, London
  • Vietnamese young people wear surgic masks after the [[COVID-19 pandemic]]
  • Makeup simulates a half-sided mask on this man for [[Halloween]]
  • The so-called '[[Mask of Agamemnon]]', a 16th-century BC mask discovered by [[Heinrich Schliemann]] in 1876 at [[Mycenae]], Greece, [[National Archaeological Museum, Athens]]
  • Mask of Shame]]"
  • Roman mosaic]], second century AD
  • [[Funeral mask]] of [[K'inich Janaab' Pakal]] at the [[National Museum of Anthropology (Mexico)]]
  • reusable filter mask]] worn by [[NYPD]] officer
  • Greek mask
  • Three photographs of the same [[noh]] mask of a woman show how her expression appears to change with a tilting of the head of the performer - to demonstrate the effect, the mask was affixed to a wall with constant lighting and only the camera was moved
  • Masked dancers at a [[tshechu]] festival, [[Bhutan]], 2013
  • A Venetian carnival mask
  • Aztec mask of [[Xiuhtecuhtli]], c. 1500, of [[Mixtec]]-Aztec provenance
  • Mask of [[Tengu]]
  • Shu]]
ANY FULL OR PARTIAL FACE COVERING, WHETHER CEREMONIAL, PROTECTIVE, DECORATIVE, OR USED AS DISGUISE
Masks; Masked; Masks (protective); Protective masks; Protective mask; Masks in theatre; Masks and theatre; Masks in ritual; Masks in ritual and theatre; Masks in theater and ritual; Ritual mask; SARS mask; SARS Masks; Swine flu mask; Theatre mask; Tribal mask; Flu mask; Face cover; Melanesian masks; Native American masks; SARS Mask; Face covering; Masked theatre
I. n.
1.
Cover (for the face), visor.
2.
Cloak, screen, blind, disguise, veil.
3.
Subterfuge, evasion, trick, shift, pretence, pretext, plea, ruse.
4.
Masquerade.
5.
Revel, piece of mummery, bustle.
II. v. a.
1.
Put a mask on.
2.
Disguise, conceal, hide, cloak, veil, screen, shroud, cover.
Masked         
  • An American football player wearing a mask that protects his face from another player's hand
  • A Korean mask worn by a [[Talchum]] performer
  • A protective surgical mask
  • Golden masks excavated from the [[Kalmakareh Cave]] in [[Lorestan]], Iran, first half of first Millennium BC, [[National Museum of Iran]]
  • Asaro mudman]] holding mask, Papua New Guinea
  • recognition]]
  • A [[Peking opera]] mask
  •  access-date = February 26, 2016}}</ref>
  • Batak]] mask dance at a funeral feast in the [[Dutch East Indies]], 1930s
  • Kwakwaka'wakw ritual mask (painted wood, fiber, and cord)
  • Fang mask]] used for the ''ngil'' ceremony, an inquisitorial search for sorcerers. Wood, [[Gabon]], 19th century
  • Iranian surgical technologist with surgical mask
  • Masks of [[Cameroon]]
  • Anonymous]]'' wear Guy Fawkes masks while protesting against the [[Church of Scientology]], 2008, London
  • Vietnamese young people wear surgic masks after the [[COVID-19 pandemic]]
  • Makeup simulates a half-sided mask on this man for [[Halloween]]
  • The so-called '[[Mask of Agamemnon]]', a 16th-century BC mask discovered by [[Heinrich Schliemann]] in 1876 at [[Mycenae]], Greece, [[National Archaeological Museum, Athens]]
  • Mask of Shame]]"
  • Roman mosaic]], second century AD
  • [[Funeral mask]] of [[K'inich Janaab' Pakal]] at the [[National Museum of Anthropology (Mexico)]]
  • reusable filter mask]] worn by [[NYPD]] officer
  • Greek mask
  • Three photographs of the same [[noh]] mask of a woman show how her expression appears to change with a tilting of the head of the performer - to demonstrate the effect, the mask was affixed to a wall with constant lighting and only the camera was moved
  • Masked dancers at a [[tshechu]] festival, [[Bhutan]], 2013
  • A Venetian carnival mask
  • Aztec mask of [[Xiuhtecuhtli]], c. 1500, of [[Mixtec]]-Aztec provenance
  • Mask of [[Tengu]]
  • Shu]]
ANY FULL OR PARTIAL FACE COVERING, WHETHER CEREMONIAL, PROTECTIVE, DECORATIVE, OR USED AS DISGUISE
Masks; Masked; Masks (protective); Protective masks; Protective mask; Masks in theatre; Masks and theatre; Masks in ritual; Masks in ritual and theatre; Masks in theater and ritual; Ritual mask; SARS mask; SARS Masks; Swine flu mask; Theatre mask; Tribal mask; Flu mask; Face cover; Melanesian masks; Native American masks; SARS Mask; Face covering; Masked theatre
·adj ·same·as Personate.
II. Masked ·Impf & ·p.p. of Mask.
III. Masked ·adj Wearing a mask or masks; characterized by masks; cincealed; hidden.
IV. Masked ·adj Having the anterior part of the head differing decidedly in color from the rest of the plumage;
- said of birds.

Wikipedia

Negative number

In mathematics, a negative number represents an opposite. In the real number system, a negative number is a number that is less than zero. Negative numbers are often used to represent the magnitude of a loss or deficiency. A debt that is owed may be thought of as a negative asset. If a quantity, such as the charge on an electron, may have either of two opposite senses, then one may choose to distinguish between those senses—perhaps arbitrarily—as positive and negative. Negative numbers are used to describe values on a scale that goes below zero, such as the Celsius and Fahrenheit scales for temperature. The laws of arithmetic for negative numbers ensure that the common-sense idea of an opposite is reflected in arithmetic. For example, −(−3) = 3 because the opposite of an opposite is the original value.

Negative numbers are usually written with a minus sign in front. For example, −3 represents a negative quantity with a magnitude of three, and is pronounced "minus three" or "negative three". To help tell the difference between a subtraction operation and a negative number, occasionally the negative sign is placed slightly higher than the minus sign (as a superscript). Conversely, a number that is greater than zero is called positive; zero is usually (but not always) thought of as neither positive nor negative. The positivity of a number may be emphasized by placing a plus sign before it, e.g. +3. In general, the negativity or positivity of a number is referred to as its sign.

Every real number other than zero is either positive or negative. The non-negative whole numbers are referred to as natural numbers (i.e., 0, 1, 2, 3...), while the positive and negative whole numbers (together with zero) are referred to as integers. (Some definitions of the natural numbers exclude zero.)

In bookkeeping, amounts owed are often represented by red numbers, or a number in parentheses, as an alternative notation to represent negative numbers.

It has been proposed that negative numbers were used on the Greek counting table at Salamis, known as the Salamis Tablet, dated to 300 BC. Negative numbers were also used in the Nine Chapters on the Mathematical Art, which in its present form dates from the period of the Chinese Han Dynasty (202 BC – AD 220), but may well contain much older material. Liu Hui (c. 3rd century) established rules for adding and subtracting negative numbers. By the 7th century, Indian mathematicians such as Brahmagupta were describing the use of negative numbers. Islamic mathematicians further developed the rules of subtracting and multiplying negative numbers and solved problems with negative coefficients. Prior to the concept of negative numbers, mathematicians such as Diophantus considered negative solutions to problems "false" and equations requiring negative solutions were described as absurd. Western mathematicians like Leibniz (1646–1716) held that negative numbers were invalid, but still used them in calculations.