Mul"ti*ple (?), a. [Cf. F. multiple, and E. quadruple, and multiply.]

Containing more than once, or more than one; consisting of more than one; manifold; repeated many times; having several, or many, parts.

Law of multiple proportion Chem., the generalization that when the same elements unite in more than one proportion, forming two or more different compounds, the higher proportions of the elements in such compounds are simple multiplies of the lowest proportion, or the proportions are connected by some simple common factor; thus, iron and oxygen unite in the proportions FeO, Fe2O3, Fe3O4, in which compounds, considering the oxygen, 3 and 4 are simple multiplies of 1. Called also the Law of Dalton, from its discoverer. -- Multiple algebra, a branch of advanced mathematics that treats of operations upon units compounded of two or more unlike units. -- Multiple conjugation Biol., a coalescence of many cells (as where an indefinite number of ameboid cells flow together into a single mass) from which conjugation proper and even fertilization may have been evolved. -- Multiple fruits. Bot. See Collective fruit, under Collective. -- Multiple star Astron., several stars in close proximity, which appear to form a single system.

 

© Webster 1913.


Mul"ti*ple, n. Math.

A quantity containing another quantity a number of times without a remainder.

A common multiple of two or more numbers contains each of them a number of times exactly; thus, 24 is a common multiple of 3 and 4. The least common multiple is the least number that will do this; thus, 12 is the least common multiple of 3 and 4.

 

© Webster 1913.