decuple
English
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Cardinal: ten Ordinal: tenth Latinate ordinal: denary Adverbial: ten times Multiplier: tenfold Latinate multiplier: decuple Group collective: tensome Multipart collective: decuplet Greek or Latinate collective: decad, decade Metric collective prefix: deca- Greek collective prefix: deca- Latinate collective prefix: deca- Fractional: tenth Metric fractional prefix: deci- Elemental: decuplet Greek prefix: decato- Number of musicians: decet Number of years: decade, decennium |
Etymology
From Middle English decuple, from Middle French décuple, from Late Latin decuplus (“tenfold”), from Latin decem (“ten”), and plicō (“fold”).[1]
Derived terms
Related terms
- decemplex, dectuple (10)
- undecuple (11)
- duodecuple (12)
- tredecuple (13)
- quattuordecuple (14)
Translations
tenfold — see tenfold
Noun
decuple (plural decuples)
- An amount multiplied by ten.
- 1842, Jacob Reese Eckfeldt with William Ewing Du Bois, A manual of gold and silver coins of all nations, struck within ..., page 89:
- The gold coin of the law of 1818 is of four denominations; the decuple of 30 ducats, the half-decuple, ...
Verb
decuple (third-person singular simple present decuples, present participle decupling, simple past and past participle decupled)
- To multiply by ten.
- 1903, Henry James, The Ambassadors:
- They were in communication as they had been, that first morning, in Sarah's salon and in her presence and Mme. de Vionnet's; and the same recognition of a great goodwill was again, after all, possible. Only the amount of response Waymarsh had then taken for granted was doubled, decupled now.
- 1993, JPRS Report: Science & Technology:
- “This assistance method makes it possible to at least double—and in some cases decuple—the life of the tool, or to boost productivity,” says Alain Cornier, head of ENSAM’s production, research, and development department.
- 2004, Mark Collier with Stephen Quirke and Annette Imhausen, The UCL Lahun papyri: religious, literary, legal, mathematical and ..., volume 1209:
- The multiplications on this fragment show four of the basic techniques used by the Egyptian scribe in performing calculations: doubling, halving, decupling, and "taking two-thirds".
- 2019, Inquisitr:
- The hefty price tag has more than decupled since he originally purchased the estate back in 2009.
- 2019 February 21, Martin Dixon, “The case for human extinction”, in Cherwell:
- The global rate of eustatic sea-level rise has already decupled since the 1990s to an average of 3 mm a year, but reaching as much as 10mm in the Pacific Ocean; Asia-Pacific is home to 60% of the world’s population.
- 2020 July 7, “Madagascar Country Office: Covid-19 response (7 July 2020)”, in ReliefWeb:
- From May 17th to July 7th 2020, the growth curve in the number people testing positive decupled, reaching an exponential shape from 304 to 3250.
- 2022 January 10, Brittney Baird, “$500K lottery ticket sold in Donelson”, in WKRN:
- Because the player chose the Power Play feature for an extra $1 and the Power Play number drawn was 10, the prize of $50,000 was decupled to $500,000, according to a release.
- 2022 January 31, Bruno Cooke, The Focus, archived from the original on 8 August 2022:
- Trillionaire Thugs NFT price decuples in three days: Here’s what’s next
- 2022 May 16, “AI initiatives in Turkey decupled in 5 years: Expert”, in Hürriyet Daily News:
- The number of initiatives on artificial intelligence (AI) has decupled in the last five years in Turkey, an expert has said.
- 2022 May 31, “Ohio governor unveils future of emergency response, technology to make state safer”, in Police1, Lexipol:
- What began with only 150 cameras has decupled into 1,500.
Related terms
Translations
tenfold — see tenfold
References
- Chambers's Etymological Dictionary, 1896, p. 114
Anagrams
Italian
Latin
Spanish
Verb
decuple
- inflection of decuplar:
- first/third-person singular present subjunctive
- third-person singular imperative
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