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What is the full form of LCM


LCM: Least Common Multiple

LCM stands for Least Common Multiple in Maths. The Lowest Common Multiple (LCM) is the other term used for the Least Common Multiple (LCM). The smallest number by which all the numbers d, e, f, etc. are divisible is called the LCM of two or more numbers, such as d, e, f, etc. Alternatively, L.C.M. is the smallest number with the elements d,e,f, etc. For instance, if you take the integers 3 and 5, the least common multiple (LCM) of 3 and 5 is 15, which is the smallest number by which 3 and 5 are divisible.

LCM full form

Consider the situation of locating the L.C.M. of the integers 12, 20, and 42.

12 = 2 x 2 x 3

20 = 2 x 2 x 5

42 = 2 x 3 x 7

2 x 2 x 3 x 5 x 7 = 420 is the L.C.M. of 12, 20, and 42.

The least frequent multiple of 12, 20, and 42 is 420.

420/12 = 35, 420/20 = 21, and 420/42 = 10.

420 is the least frequent multiple and is divisible by 12, 20, and 42.

Apart from the Least Common Multiple, there are two more full forms of the abbreviation LCM that are as follows-

LCM: London College of Music

LCM was established in 1887, and up until 1991, it operated as a separate music college out of Great Marlborough Street in the heart of London. After then, the college relocated to Ealing and joined the Polytechnic of West London (which became Thames Valley University and was renamed the University of West London in 2011).

History of London College Music

Thames Valley University established a school called London College of Music & Media in 1996. It included LCM as well as a number of media-related courses like music technology, radio, journalism, and other creative and digital arts. The Department of Music now oversees the administration of music-related courses at LCM, which was renamed the Faculty of the Arts in 2005. The music program has been running under the name London College of Music once more since March 2007.

Guy Woolfenden, Nick Ingman, and John McCabe (after he retired from the position of Principal) were among the visiting lecturers who had previously taught at LCM. Stephen Montague, Judith Weir, Jonathan Dove, David Sawer, Deirdre Gribbin, Judith Bingham, Augusta Read Thomas, Param Vir, Jonty Harrison, Philip Grange, Camden Reeves, Francis Pott, Nigel Hess, Andrew Poppy, John Cameron, Simon Holt, Michael Finnissy, the late Geoffrey Burgon, and the late David Bedford were just a few of the guest speakers who have given presentations at Martino Tirimo, John Lill, Howard Shelley, and several more renowned musicians have given piano master lessons.

Academics at London School of Music

The London College of Music Examinations (LCM Examinations) department, which oversees the institution's external exams, is a division of the University that is connected to LCM.

The LCM's music technology division houses the Native Instruments Labs in addition to 25 recording facilities. LCM is an approved Native Instruments training centre and provides Apple-certified Logic, Pro Tools, and Ableton Live training classes in addition to undergraduate and graduate-level music technology courses. A Grammy Award-winning record producer Pip Williams, Dr Simon Zagorski-Thomas, publisher of the Journal on the Art of Record Production, producer Paul Borg, and Larry Whelan, a longtime Transglobal Underground associate, are all on the teaching team for music technology. The Messiaen expert and organist Dr Robert Sholl is a Reader in Music at LCM. John McLeod, Martin Ellerby, Nigel Clarke, Dr Laurence Roman, Dr Paul Robinson, Dr Jeremy Arden, Simon Lambro, who is an Oscar-nominated film composer and the current Course Leader for undergraduate Composition for the BMus degree, and Dr Martin Glover have all served on the composition staff over the past 20 years.

LCM: Little Company of Mary

The Roman Catholic women's religious order known as The Little Company of Mary, commonly known as the Blue Sisters, is dedicated to offering care for the sick, the dying, and the suffering. Venerable Mary Potter established the order in Nottingham, England, in 1877.

This religious organisation is separate from the Sisters of the Company of Mary, Our Lady, a women's religious order established by Saint Jeanne de Lestonnac in 1607, and the Company of Mary, a men's society (also Roman Catholic) created by Saint Louis de Montfort in 1713.

History of Little Company of Mary

The Little Company of Mary was founded in Hyson Green, Nottingham, in an empty warehouse, in 1877. The treatment of the sick and dying is their main responsibility. They travelled to Italy in 1882. While there, Mary Potter founded Calvary Hospital on the Via Stefano Rotondo, close to St. John Lateran, where she had gone to get permission for the constitutions of her new congregation.

Six sisters set up a community in Australia in 1885 at the invitation of Cardinal Francis Moran in Sydney, Australia. Mother Mary Xavier Lynch, the order's first provincial for Australasia, guided its expansion and the establishment of various hospitals in Australia and New Zealand. In Port Elizabeth, South Africa, she also oversaw the establishment of a hospital. The sisters expanded their business to Ireland in 1888.

Three Little Company of Mary Sisters arrived in Chicago in 1893 to launch their primary healthcare workers in the country. In Evergreen Park, Illinois, Little Company of Mary Hospital was established in 1930. There are sisters employed as of 2019 in California, Illinois, Indiana, and Ohio. Hospitals, home care, hospice, extended care, and going to promote are all part of their healthcare ministries. The Little Company of Mary congregation had expanded to the point by 1922 when it could create provinces with local provincials. Australasia, England, Ireland and Italy were the four provinces.


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