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
single word requests - What is a vertical panorama called? - English . . . A person on a mountain has the greater field of view, perhaps The maximum vertical distance that can be viewed is from the horizon (or objects on the horizon, including distant hills) to the zenith, directly overhead I'm not entirely sure how the word you want would be used Could you edit your question to give a real-world example?
A word to describe vertical and horizontal movement? Orthogonal does not imply horizontal and vertical movement Orthogonal implies that one movement is at a right angle with respect to the other Horizontal and diagonal movements are thus always orthogonal, but two diagonal movements can also be orthogonal to each other In fact, the two diagonal movements in chess are orthogonal to each other
What is a word to accompany horizontal and vertical? If 'horizontal' follows the horizon, and 'vertical' ascends from the horizon, is there a word for a line from the viewer to the horizon? Otherwise, is there a broadly accepted business term for describing data where there are two horizontals, but one is an iterative representation of the first?
expressions - Is x plotted against y or is y plotted against x . . . The convention is that x would occupy the horizontal axis, while y occupies the vertical axis, regardless if x is plotted against y, or y against x Visually, which often would appear mutually indiscriminatable for 1-1 mapping plots
Is there a hypernym for horizontal and vertical? If I want to speak of North, South, East, West in a general sense I could, for example, use the term cardinal direction Which term is appropriate to sum up horizontal and vertical in the same man
What is the word used to describe things ordered by height? Vertical simply implies a direction, or height Sometimes it's used in the context of a hierarchy, but even there it implies "up-down", not stacked Are you suggesting that a sentence like "The drunken men raised themselves from the horizontal to the vertical" implies the men were laying in a line and then formed a human pyramid?