ordinate - meaning and definition. What is ordinate
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What (who) is ordinate - definition

NAMES FOR A SYSTEM'S TWO AXES IN COORDINATE GEOMETRY
Ordinate; Abscissæ; Abscissae; Abcissa; Abscissas; Abscissa
  • Illustration of a Cartesian coordinate plane, showing the absolute values (unsigned dotted line lengths) of the coordinates of the points (2, 3), (0, 0), (–3, 1), and (–1.5, –2.5). The first value in each of these signed ordered pairs is the abscissa of the corresponding point, and the second value is its ordinate.

Ordinate         
·adj Well-ordered; orderly; regular; methodical.
II. Ordinate ·vt To appoint, to regulate; to Harmonize.
III. Ordinate ·noun The distance of any point in a curve or a straight line, measured on a line called the axis of ordinates or on a line parallel to it, from another line called the axis of abscissas, on which the corresponding abscissa of the point is measured.
Ordinate         
In a system of plane co-ordinates (see Co-ordinates), the distance of any point from the axis of abscissas measured parallel to the axis of ordinates.
ordinate         
['?:d?n?t]
¦ noun Mathematics a straight line from a point on a graph drawn parallel to the vertical axis and meeting the other; the y-coordinate. Compare with abscissa.
Origin
C17: from L. linea ordinata applicata 'line applied parallel'.

Wikipedia

Abscissa and ordinate

In common usage, the abscissa refers to the (x) coordinate and the ordinate refers to the (y) coordinate of a standard two-dimensional graph.

The distance of a point from the y-axis, scaled with the x-axis, is called the abscissa or x coordinate of the point. The distance of a point from the x-axis scaled with the y-axis is called the ordinate or y coordinate of the point.

For example, if (x, y) is an ordered pair in the Cartesian plane, then the first coordinate in the plane (x) is called the abscissa and the second coordinate (y) is the ordinate.

In mathematics, the abscissa (; plural abscissae or abscissas) and the ordinate are respectively the first and second coordinate of a point in a Cartesian coordinate system:

abscissa x {\displaystyle \equiv x} -axis (horizontal) coordinate
ordinate y {\displaystyle \equiv y} -axis (vertical) coordinate

Usually these are the horizontal and vertical coordinates of a point in plane, the rectangular coordinate system. An ordered pair consists of two terms—the abscissa (horizontal, usually x) and the ordinate (vertical, usually y)—which define the location of a point in two-dimensional rectangular space:

( x abscissa , y ordinate ) {\displaystyle (\overbrace {x} ^{\displaystyle {\text{abscissa}}},\overbrace {y} ^{\displaystyle {\text{ordinate}}})}

The abscissa of a point is the signed measure of its projection on the primary axis, whose absolute value is the distance between the projection and the origin of the axis, and whose sign is given by the location on the projection relative to the origin (before: negative; after: positive).

The ordinate of a point is the signed measure of its projection on the secondary axis, whose absolute value is the distance between the projection and the origin of the axis, and whose sign is given by the location on the projection relative to the origin (before: negative; after: positive).

Examples of use of ordinate
1. Consequently they can all now co–ordinate their protests.
2. International agencies need to co–ordinate their operations more effectively.
3. They co–ordinate with Syria and Iran on issues that they believe in, exactly in the same way that others co–ordinate with America or France," says Sayyed Mohammad Hussein Fadlallah, Lebanon‘s top Shia cleric.
4. Why co–ordinate the public announcements about incidents separated by four months?
5. We are committed to strengthening those capacities to better co–ordinate and manage GMS Programme.