Supplement
Supplement (from Latin supplementum , English supplement , French supplément ) generally means "supplement". One calls a supplement
- in the book industry a supplementary publication to a completed book or series of books , see volume (book) #Supplement
- analogous to scientific journals that appear periodically, additional issues - mostly on a common topic, see volume (book) #Supplement
- in journalism, the (typically colored, small-format) weekend supplement or another (journalistic) supplement to a daily newspaper
- in nutritional science a dietary supplement
- In medicine, a substance added to food, see supplementation
- Additional software products for PC software, see Software # Development of software
- In linguistics, a group of words within a phrase (linguistics) that can be omitted without the sentence becoming incomplete
- in the kitchen language, submitting the second portion of the dish ordered on request, see list of technical terms
- In Classical Philology, a modern addition to an incomplete or incomplete ancient work (filling of gaps in the handwritten text or adding a missing final part); added was what the ancient author had wanted or should or could have written in the opinion of the addendum.
The following are designated as supplementary :
- In mathematics, two angles that add up to 180 °
See also:
Wiktionary: supplementary - explanations of meanings, word origins, synonyms, translations