Definition of Abscisa
Ab*scis"sa (&?;), n.; E. pl.
Abscissas, L. pl. Abscissæ. [L.,
fem. of abscissus, p. p. of absindere to cut of. See
Abscind.] (Geom.) One of the elements of reference by
which a point, as of a curve, is referred to a system of fixed rectilineal
coördinate axes. When referred to two intersecting axes, one of
them called the axis of abscissas, or of X, and the other the axis of
ordinates, or of Y, the abscissa of the point is the distance cut
off from the axis of X by a line drawn through it and parallel to the axis
of Y. When a point in space is referred to three axes having a common
intersection, the abscissa may be the distance measured parallel to
either of them, from the point to the plane of the other two axes.
Abscissas and ordinates taken together are called coördinates. -- OX
or PY is the abscissa of the point P of the curve, OY or PX its
ordinate, the intersecting lines OX and OY being the axes of abscissas and
ordinates respectively, and the point O their origin.
- Webster's Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
- (Geometry): One of the elements of reference by which a point, as of a curve, is referred to a system of fixed rectilineal coördinate axes. When referred to two intersecting axes, one of them called the axis of abscissas, or of X, and the other the axis of ordinates, or of Y, the abscissa of the point is the distance cut off from the axis of X by a line drawn through it and parallel to the axis of Y. When a point in space is referred to three axes having a common intersection, the abscissa may be the distance measured parallel to either of them, from the point to the plane of the other two axes. Abscissas and ordinates taken together are called coördinates. -- OX or PY is the abscissa of the point P of the curve, OY or PX its ordinate, the intersecting lines OX and OY being the axes of abscissas and ordinates respectively, and the point O their origin.
Latin
- abscissa
- The Nuttall Encyclopedia
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