English edit

Etymology edit

pseudo- +‎ numerical

Adjective edit

pseudonumerical (not comparable)

  1. Numerical in some ways (e.g. rank order) but not others (such as supporting arithmetic operations).
    • 1977, Centre for Educational Research and Innovation, Jean Piaget, Piagetian Inventories: The Experiments of Jean Piaget, page 22:
      it would be tempting to show that he quite rapidly applies to it intuitive operators (or intuitive quantifiers) of the following type: "an apple", "1 apple", "apples", "the apples" (transition from unity to plurality), some apples " ( restricted plurality ) , " many apples " " few apples " (pseudonumerical plurality ) , "no apples" ( a specific null class: no apples no bread), etc.
    • 1995, International Aerospace Abstracts - Volume 35, Issues 7-9, page 1910:
      A general accurate pseudonumerical technique for the analysis of single and multilayer open planar resonators loaded with dielectric slabs is given that can be used to obtain inversion curves.
    • 2013, Hildegarde Heymann, Harry T. Lawless, Sensory Evaluation of Food: Principles and Practices, page 251:
      In many cases pseudonumerical scales have been set up to resemble category scales, but pseudonumerical scales really cut across different sensory experiences, mixing qualities.
    • 2016, Brendan Wallace, Alastair Ross, Beyond Human Error: Taxonomies and Safety Science, page 59:
      An example of how this is done would be to induce responses to a statement by asking people to, for example, agree or disagree with the statement by discriminating between a number (typically 5, 7, or 9) of numerical (or pseudonumerical) points.
  2. (mathematics) Being a factor-object of an algebraicly numerical object.
    • 2016, Christian Engström, Axel Torshage, “Enclosure of the Numerical Range of a Class of Non-Selfadjoint Rational Operator Functions”, in arXiv[1]:
      We introduce a pseudonumerical range and study an enclosure of this set.