- single word requests - X, Y, Z — horizontal, vertical and . . .
If x and y are horizontal, z is vertical; if x and z are horizontal, y is vertical The words horizontal and vertical are generally used in a planar (2-dimensional) sense, not spatial (3-dimensional) Which is the reason you may not find a word corresponding to the third dimension along with horizontal and vertical
- meaning - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
The intersection of the vertical plane with the horizontal plane would form a transverse This medical definition from thefreedictionary com describes: transverse plane of space, n an imaginary plane that cuts the body in two, separating the superior half from the inferior half, and that lies at a right angle from the body's vertical axis
- expressions - Is x plotted against y or is y plotted against x . . .
"Vertical against horizontal", and, if you choose the almost (but not quite) universal convention of having x-values along the horizontal axis, and the variables are x and y, 'y against x' There is the complication that the horizontal axis is usually called the 'x-axis'; this doesn't matter when you're plotting v against t (or t against v
- What’s the difference between “line” and “row”?
The terms can overlap again, though, in technical areas In tables or databases it is common to speak of rows and columns, with an emphatic horizontal vertical contrast in those terms: a row is implicitly horizontal, and cannot be mistaken for a column It is also perfectly intelligible, however, to speak of ‘lines in tables’
- What is meant by eye in “eye to the side” or “eye to the sky”?
You might find Flatbed Terminology useful Apparently when a large coil is being transported on a truck, if the "eye" of the coil (either of the "open" ends) faces fowards or sideways (as opposed to upwards, "to the sky"), it's called a suicide coil (truck driver is more likely to end up getting killed if there's an accident and the coil breaks free of its strapping)
- meaning - Origin of Plumb to mean absolutely - English Language . . .
Surely 'plumb vertical' is a builder's term, meaning 'precisely vertical as measured by plumbline', and it was taken up by outsiders who assumed it just meant very (I have seen it as plum as well as the variations in the dictionary)
- Technical Names for Body Halves – Upper and Lower
Stack Exchange Network Stack Exchange network consists of 183 Q A communities including Stack Overflow, the largest, most trusted online community for developers to learn, share their knowledge, and build their careers
- Difference between under, underneath, below and beneath
"My house lay below theirs on a beautiful, flower-covered hillside" In a vertical-type plane, below means located at a lower level on that same plane Here, we would not say "under" In this sense, none of the others work And this is the tricky one, too
|