Orthographic — may refer to: Orthographic projection Orthographic projection (geometry) Orthographic projection (cartography) Orthography (written language) This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the same title. If an … Wikipedia
Orthographic — Or tho*graph ic, Orthographical Or tho*graph ic*al, a. [Cf. F. orthographique, L. orthographus, Gr. ?.] 1. Of or pertaining to orthography, or right spelling; also, correct in spelling; as, orthographical rules; the letter was orthographic. [1913 … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
orthographic — 1660s, from ORTHO (Cf. ortho ) straight, right + Gk. graphos writing … Etymology dictionary
orthographic — [ôr΄thə graf′ik] adj. 1. of or characterized by orthography 2. Geom. of right angles and perpendicular lines; orthogonal: Also orthographical orthographically adv … English World dictionary
Orthographic — Projection Pro*jec tion, n. [L. projectio: cf. F. projection.] [1913 Webster] 1. The act of throwing or shooting forward. [1913 Webster] 2. A jutting out; also, a part jutting out, as of a building; an extension beyond something else. [1913… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
orthographic — adj. Orthographic is used with these nouns: ↑convention … Collocations dictionary
orthographic — orthography ► NOUN (pl. orthographies) ▪ the conventional spelling system of a language. DERIVATIVES orthographic adjective … English terms dictionary
Orthographic projection (cartography) — Orthographic projection (equatorial aspect) of eastern hemisphere 30W–150E An orthographic projection is a map projection of cartography. Like the stereographic projection and gnomonic projection, orthographic projection is a perspective (or… … Wikipedia
Orthographic projection — Orthographic Or tho*graph ic, Orthographical Or tho*graph ic*al, a. [Cf. F. orthographique, L. orthographus, Gr. ?.] 1. Of or pertaining to orthography, or right spelling; also, correct in spelling; as, orthographical rules; the letter was… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Orthographic rules — are general rules used when breaking a word into its stem and modifiers. An example would be: singular English words ending with y, when pluralized, end with ies. Contrast this to Morphological rules which contain corner cases to these general… … Wikipedia