Sufficiently large
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In mathematics, the phrase sufficiently large is used in contexts such as:
- <math>f(x)</math> is true for sufficiently large <math>x</math>
which is actually shorthand for:
- there exists an <math>a\in\mathbb{R}</math> such that <math>f(x)</math> is true for all <math>x\ge a</math>.
This does not necessarily mean that any particular value for <math>a</math> is known, but only that such an <math>a</math> exists. The phrase "sufficiently large" should not be confused with the phrases "arbitrarily large" or "infinitely large".
"Sufficiently large" is sometimes the subject of mathematical humor; for example, as in the mathematician's joke "π = 3, for sufficiently large values of 3".
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Other uses in mathematics
A Haken manifold is sometimes called sufficiently large.