In
mathematics, an
abscissa (; plural
abscissae or
abscissæ or
abscissas) is the perpendicular distance of a point from the vertical axis. Usually this is the horizontal coordinate of a point in a two-dimensional rectangular
Cartesian coordinate system. The term can also refer to the horizontal axis (typically
x-axis) of a two-dimensional graph (because that axis is used to define and measure the horizontal coordinates of points in the space). 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.