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The conus medullaris is the bottom part of the spinal cord. It normally ends at T12 or L1, so you are normal. Below that level, the spinal canal contains a bundle of loose nerves called the cauda equina.
Decimals can be "terminating" "recurring" or "other." A terminating decimal is one which is finite. Recurring and other decimals continue on forever. For instance 0.5 is a terminating decimal. 0.729 is a terminating decimal. 0.3333333... is not a terminating decimal. pi (3.1415926535....) is not a terminating decimal.
It means the end of your spinal cord is just where it should be and doesn't appear to have any problems.
CONUS is a technical term used by the U.S. Military which is specifically defined as the 48 contiguous states, but is silent on the District of Columbia.
OS can mean "ordinary seaman", so it applies to the Merchant Marine. CONUS is CONtinental United States and refers to the 48 contiguous states. OS can means OverSeas.
All irrational numbers have decimal representations which are non-terminating.
Some decimals repeat. Some decimals go on forever. Some decimals stop. Those are called terminating decimals.
Assuming that you mean a digit, it is a terminating decimal.
Conus medullaris is unremarkable means that upon examination, there are no abnormalities or anomalies detected in the conus medullaris, which is the tapered end of the spinal cord. This finding suggests that the structure appears normal and there are no apparent issues to note.
I am not a professional but I have this phrase in my spinal MRI results for my lumbar spine. The conus medullaris terminates (ends) normally in a certain area or near a certain vertebrae in your spine. Like L-1 or L-2. Possibly this is what your looking for.
To end, or if taling about decimals, a terminating decimal is a decimal that doesn't continue forever, like 0.2, a non-terminating decimal would be pi.
No it is a rational number. Unless you mean 0.123451234512345...., then that is an irrational number because it is non-terminating.