| Across |
| 5. | A data value that lies a significant distance away from the concentration of data values |
| 7. | Two numbers that are reciprocals of the other |
| 9. | The line from one corner to the opposite one, not an adjacent one, a line that isn't quite horizontal nor vertical |
| 10. | 2-dimensional, 4-sided figures |
| 11. | Measured informational values that can be broken up into smaller increments |
| 13. | The mean of the distances from each data value to the mean |
| 16. | When a number is divided into its lowest prime factors, such as 12 = 2 * 2 * 3 |
| 17. | The sum of all of the data values divided by the amount of data values there are |
| 19. | Comparison of two values pertaining to different units |
| 20. | Comparison of two numbers with a colon, usually |
| 21. | To understand and explain data |
| 22. | The number to the left of the sign has a greater value, or is equal to the number to the right |
| 25. | Values that express the distribution of a data set, such as the range |
| 27. | The occurrence, proximity, and spread of data |
| 29. | A numerical sentence including an equal sign, showing equivalence between two expressions |
| 30. | The solution to a division problem |
| 31. | The number to the left of the sign has a lesser value than the number on the right |
| 32. | The interval or value with the highest occurrence |
| 34. | The like factors between a set of numbers' prime factorizations |
| 35. | The values that give a filling description of a data set, such as the mean or median |
| 36. | A numerical sentence when two expressions are not equal to each other, separated by an inequality sign |
| 37. | An expression with variables in it |
| 38. | Non-repeating, non-terminating decimals |
| 39. | Going left to right, parallel to the ground |