English to Malay Dictionary reciprocal

reciprocal

timbal balik
definition
noun
Let's work out our problem using the reciprocal of the numerator fraction.
a mathematical expression or function so related to another that their product is one; the quantity obtained by dividing the number one by a given quantity.
In English, we often omit the ‘each other’, but in Italian, when the action is shared among two or more people and re-directed amongst them, then the reciprocal should be used.
a pronoun or verb expressing mutual action or relationship, e.g., each other , fight.
adjective
she was hoping for some reciprocal comment or gesture
given, felt, or done in return.
the treaty is a bilateral commitment with reciprocal rights and duties
(of an agreement or obligation) bearing on or binding each of two parties equally.
translation of 'reciprocal'
adjective
timbal balik
example
The federal government likes to talk about 'reciprocal' obligation and mutualism.
The 'reciprocal' function is its own inverse, which might seem to pose a problem in using Newton's method.
He defined the curvature of a circle as the 'reciprocal' of its radius.
The main banks have 'reciprocal' agreements that allow each other's customers to use cash machines free of charge.
We still have their 'reciprocal' tables going up to the reciprocals of numbers up to several billion.
Australia and New Zealand have a 'reciprocal' agreement on employment, allowing their citizens to work in either country.
There is also a simple way to find the 'reciprocal' of a continued fraction.
Rights and responsibilities are 'reciprocal' , two sides of one coin.
Giving is 'reciprocal' , there is an expectation: what shall be returned?
The plan came unstuck when the Department of Health said medical charges could not be waived as Britain did not have a 'reciprocal' agreement with the west African country to treat its residents.
We hope it will go over there and raise their interest and they will do something 'reciprocal' .
We know that in 2000 a 'reciprocal' agreement was signed between Australia and New Zealand, and we all support that.
The movement towards free trade spread across Europe in a series of 'reciprocal' trade agreements beginning with the Cobden Chevalier Treaty of 1860 between Britain and France.
For the latter Professor Aitken would ask for members of the class to give him numbers for which he would then write down the 'reciprocal' , the square root, the cube root or other appropriate expression.
This led to a 'reciprocal' trip by members of Kendal Choral Society to Voiron, in Southern France, in 2004, an area well known for Chartreuse, the liqueur originally created by the Carthusian Monks.
While our data supports the traditional view of each other as the primary and most common 'reciprocal' construction in English, we find a greater degree of variation in construction types than this traditional view might suggest.
A 'reciprocal' visit from the English side is planned for later in the summer.
In other words, States tend to react to the breach of 'reciprocal' obligations by other States.
Does he agree that people who receive a benefit have a 'reciprocal' responsibility to minimise their reliance on the State; if not, why not?
With 'reciprocal' verbs, there are two or more subjects which are acting on each other.
Each trigonometric function has a 'reciprocal' function.
He said that, in recent years, co-operation has greatly expanded and diversified, with bilateral trade surging and a noteworthy increase in 'reciprocal' investment.
The result of the visit was an agreement on 'reciprocal' protection and promotion of investment.
This is because many clubs have 'reciprocal' agreements with other clubs: You let me play your course and I'll let you play mine.
Normally, relationships progress by way of a reasonably paced flow of self-disclosure that is 'reciprocal' in nature.
Navigators in the open sea normally alter course in this way because they believe there is another vessel dead ahead on a 'reciprocal' course or on their port bow in circumstances which require an alteration to starboard.
However, by corollary, the husband had a 'reciprocal' duty to provide a home for the wife to live in with him, so long as she did not commit a matrimonial offence (such as adultery).
The close links between Waterford and Newfoundland are well documented and indeed only a few months ago a group from Newfoundland toured the Waterford and South East area with a 'reciprocal' visit planned next year.
We want to enjoy a 'reciprocal' co-operation when we need to call on players to face France.
However, in peer relations, social interaction likewise needs to be 'reciprocal' to allow cognitive elaboration.
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