maximal

adj
/ˈmæksɪməl/

Etymology

From maximum + -al.

  1. derived from maximum
  2. formed as maximal — “maximum + -al

Definitions

  1. Largest, greatest (in magnitude), highest, most.

    • The organification of iodide in the thyroid gland was described using a second order rate constant (KthybindC, /nmol/L*hr/kg thyroid weight) fitted to provide thyroidal iodide stores near the maximal value, which increased with age.
  2. Larger than any previous term in the sequence.

    • In the sequence (1, 2, 10, 5, 12, 6), the fifth term, f(5) = 12, is a maximal term, as each of the first 4 terms are smaller than 12.
  3. Such that no other element is greater (with respect to the given partial order).

    • With respect to the ordering induced by set-theoretic inclusion, the set #92;#123;#92;#123;2#92;#125;,#92;#123;1,2#92;#125;,#92;#123;2,3#92;#125;#92;#125; has two maximal elements: #92;#123;1,2#92;#125; and #92;#123;2,3#92;#125;
  4. + 3 more definitions
    1. The element of a set with the greatest magnitude.

    2. Said of an ideal of a ring or a filter of a lattice

      Said of an ideal of a ring or a filter of a lattice: that it is as large as it can be without being trivial (improper).

    3. Said of a set of well-formed formulas

      Said of a set of well-formed formulas: that it is as large as it can be without being inconsistent; i.e. that for any well-formed formula φ, the set contains either φ or ~φ.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for maximal. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA