Welcome to Anagrammer Crossword Genius! Keep reading below to see if henation is an answer to any crossword puzzle or word game (Scrabble, Words With Friends etc). Scroll down to see all the info we have compiled on henation.
henation
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There are 8 letters in HENATION ( A1E1H4I1N1O1T1 )
To search all scrabble anagrams of HENATION, to go: HENATION
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Definitions of henation in various dictionaries:
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| Possible Dictionary Clues |
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| A female bird, especially of a domestic fowl. |
| A female lobster, crab, or salmon. |
| Henation might refer to |
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In mathematics, the Hyperoperation sequence is an infinite sequence of arithmetic operations (called hyperoperations) that starts with the unary operation of successor (n = 0), then continues with the binary operations of addition (n = 1), multiplication (n = 2), and exponentiation (n = 3), after which the sequence proceeds with further binary operations extending beyond exponentiation, using right-associativity. For the operations beyond exponentiation, the nth member of this sequence is named by Reuben Goodstein after the Greek prefix of n suffixed with -ation (such as tetration (n = 4), pentation (n = 5), hexation (n = 6), etc.) and can be written as using n − 2 arrows in Knuth's up-arrow notation. * Each hyperoperation may be understood recursively in terms of the previous one by:* * * * a * [ * n * ] * b * = * * * * * a * [ * n * − * 1 * ] * ( * a * [ * n * − * 1 * ] * ( * a * [ * n * − * 1 * ] * ( * ⋯ * [ * n * − * 1 * ] * ( * a * [ * n * − * 1 * ] * ( * a * [ * n * − * 1 * ] * a * ) * ) * ⋯ * ) * ) * ) * * ⏟ * * * * * b * * * copies of * * * a * * * * , * * n * ≥ * 2 * * * {\displaystyle a[n]b=\underbrace {a[n-1](a[n-1](a[n-1](\cdots [n-1](a[n-1](a[n-1]a))\cdots )))} _{\displaystyle b{\mbox{ copies of }}a},\quad n\geq 2} * It may also be defined according to the recursion rule part of the definition, as in Knuth's up-arrow version of the Ackermann function: * * * * * a * [ * n * ] * b * = * a * [ * n * − * 1 * ] * * ( * * a * [ * n * ] * * ( * * b * − * 1 * * ) * * * ) * * , * * n * ≥ * 1 * * * {\displaystyle a[n]b=a[n-1]\left(a[n]\left(b-1\right)\right),\quad n\geq 1} * This can be used to easily show numbers much ... |