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* [https://grammarist.com/usage/naught-nought/ Nought is conventionally used in British English for the number zero...In both British English and American English, naught is used in nonmathematical contexts to mean nothing.] -- grammarist.com
Should we update the article accordingly? [[User:Ebony Jackson|Ebony Jackson]] ([[User talk:Ebony Jackson|talk]]) 21:26, 13 November 2020 (UTC)
== Missing information on Mathematical subscripts below the line ==
If we are referring to the probability of something we may use an italic ''p'' immediately followed by a subscript to refer to the item the probability refers, eg C to look like: ''p''<sub>C</sub>.
I came to this page with the intention of finding out why it is written this way around rather than C<sub>''p''</sub>, in the same way as N<sub>0</sub> and N<sub>9</sub> where the something comes first and the quality is the subscript.
This is where people would come to understand the apparent contradictory notations.
[[User:FreeFlow99|FreeFlow99]] ([[User talk:FreeFlow99|talk]]) 11:46, 3 November 2021 (UTC)
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