factoring
Concise Oxford English Dictionary © 2008 Oxford University Press:
factor/ˈfaktə(r)/
▶noun
- 1 a circumstance, fact, or influence that contributes to a result.
■ Biology a gene that determines a hereditary characteristic.
- 2 Mathematics a number or quantity that when multiplied with another produces a given number or expression.
■ a number or algebraic expression by which another is exactly divisible.
- 3 a level on a scale of measurement: a protection factor of 15.
- 4 Physiology any of a number of substances in the blood which are involved in coagulation.
- 5 a business agent.
■ a company that buys a manufacturer's invoices at a discount and takes responsibility for collecting the payments due on them.
■ Scottish a land agent or steward.
- 1 (factor something in/out) include (or exclude) something as a relevant element when making a decision.
- 2 Mathematics another term for factorize.
- 3 sell (one's receivable debts) to a factor.
– derivatives
factorable adjective.
factorable adjective.
– origin ME (meaning ‘doer’, also in the Scots sense ‘agent’): from Fr. facteur or L. factor, from fact-, facere ‘do’.

