senary

English

Etymology

From the Latin sēnārius (consisting of six each), from sēnī (six each, six at a time) + -ārius (whence the English suffix -ary).

Adjective

senary (not comparable)

  1. Of sixth rank or order.
    • 2001, Manish K. Gupta, David G. Glynn, and T. Aaron Gulliver, On Senary Simplex Codes, in Applied Algebra, Algebraic Algorithms and Error-Correcting Codes: proceedings of 14th International Symposium, Serdar Boztaş, Igor E. Shparlinski (eds.), page 112
      In particular, one can construct mixed binary/ternary codes via senary codes by applying the Chinese Gray map (see Example 1).

Translations

See also

Anagrams

This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.