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Not usually. It tends to be a nickname, or a way to refer to someone who has the same name as his father-- "Oh, there goes Jack Smith and Jack Junior"; or it can be a slang expression for someone who is young and inexperienced: "Listen Junior, you have a lot to learn!" But I have noticed in some Latino communities that the name is sometimes given as a formal first name. However, this usage is not very common.
There is no specific name. If the numerator and denominator are polynomials in the variable then the question describes an algebraic fraction. But there is no reason at all to assume that they are polynomials. There is no specific phrase that describes sin(x)/x, for example.
Winner, Number1
what is the grammatical name given to the expression- with every little feeling
what expression does not name an integer
The name "Seiren"describes someone whose heart is clean and pure and shows no personal greed.
There is no specific name. They can be fractions which contain algebraic or trigonometric or non-integral exponential expressions.
the meaning for the name abinaya is expression
Substituting a name is "evaluating". But there is no special name for substituting an expression.
There really is no term used for those who invent words. Neologism is the word for a new word or expression.
John Doe, who was tired of every Tom, Dick and Harry using his name to refer to someone else who's name couldn't be recalled.