Turns out That the Division Sign Packs a Secret Meaning No One's Ever Noticed Before
There Is A Hidden Meaning In The Division Sign You've Probably Never Noticed
By Jaime LutzNov. 13 2018, Updated 2:42 p.m. ET
Math can be a touchy subject for some people. While STEM nerds are oftentimes very vocal about their hatred for Arts and Humanities, the Lit and History nerds are often as vocally critical of math. And if you're of the latter group, then I've got some bad news for you, just when you think you've gone and got the basics of adding, subtracting, multiplying and dividing down, this newest discovery on the internet shows that there's more to a well-known symbol than we previously thought.
On Monday, Twitter user Abdul Dremali tweeted an observation about the division symbol that quickly went viral for making everyone see their childhood math lessons differently.
i just found out that the division symbol (÷) is just a blank fraction with dots replacing the numerator and denominator. oh my god.
— abdul 🚀 (@Advil) September 11, 2017
According to BuzzFeed, there's some anecdotal truth to this idea. While the symbol, known as an obelus, was once used to signify uncertainty in a quotation or even subtraction, it isn't clear why it was eventually adopted as a division symbol in 1659. But math teachers have used it ever since to help teach students that division is just making two numbers into a simplified fraction—and it isn't the only symbol in which Twitter users have noted a clever design.
The = symbol was specifically designed to be two lines of visibly equal length. Unbeatable design.
— Derwin McGeary 🥃🇪🇺 (@derwinmcgeary) September 11, 2017
Pretty crazy, right?
in addition to the percent % there is also a ‰ for thousandths and ‱ for ten thousandths
— 🇺🇸 vex addict 🇺🇸 (@valrus) September 12, 2017
And guess what—‰ is called the permille and ‱ is called the permyriad. You can see how they get their names—per cent means per hundred and per mille means per thousand, derived from Latin. A "myriad" is an outdated way to say ten thousand.
Another one, never saw it till I knew it. The power icon on all electronics, the line though a circle is actually binary, 1 is on 0 is off
— SP Aimes (@SPAimes) September 12, 2017
That one's not technically math, but I bet you never realized that (or, at least I didn't). For many of these, I just wish I knew the meanings of the symbols when I was struggling in elementary school math.
@Autumn__faithhh wtf this is more math I learned in one tweet than I have all throughout highschool
— Emma (@EmmaBlosenco) September 11, 2017
It's too bad they didn't teach cool stuff like this when I was a kid in school, it might've made me hate math a little bit less.
[h/t BuzzFeed]