How do you pronounce the word "sinh" and the names of the other hyperbolic functions?
2 Answers
It is pronounced as shine, cosh is pronounced as written, and tanh is tanch
It's not really an attempt to treat "sinh" as a word, more a convention to convey that it's a hyperbolic version of "sine"
Explanation:
The full names of the six trigonometric functions are:
"sine" (
#tt"sin"# ), called "sine" (sounds like "sign")."cosine" (
#tt"cos"# ), called "cosine" (like "co-sign") or "cos"."tangent" (
#tt"tan"# ), called "tan""secant", (
#tt"sec"# ), called "sec""cosecant", (
#tt"csc"# or#tt"cosec"# ), called "cosec""cotangent", (
#tt"cot"# ), called "cot"
To denote the hyperbolic versions, an
"hyperbolic sine" (
#tt"sinh"# ), called "shine" or "cinch""hyperbolic cosine" (
#tt"cosh"# ), called "cosh""hyperbolic tangent" (
#tt"tanh"# ), called "tanch""hyperbolic secant" (
#tt"sech"# ), called "shek" or "sech""hyperbolic cosecant" (
#tt"csch"# or#tt"cosech"# ), called "coshek" or "cosech""hyperbolic cotangent" (
#tt"coth"# ), called "coth"