Direction
Origin
Latin dīrectiōn-em , n. of action from dīrig-ĕre to direct
Definitions
- 1: guidance or supervision of action or conduct : management
- 2. archaic : superscription
- 3a : an explicit instruction : order
- b : assistance in pointing out the proper route —usually used in plural <asked for directions to the beach>
- 4: the line or course on which something is moving or is aimed to move or along which something is pointing or facing
- 5. archaic : directorate
- 6a : a channel or direct course of thought or action
- b : tendency, trend
- c : a guiding, governing, or motivating purpose
- b : a word, phrase, or sign indicating the appropriate tempo, mood, or intensity of a passage or movement in music
Description
Direction is the information contained in the relative position of one point with respect to another point without the distance information. Directions may be either relative to some indicated reference (the violins in a full orchestra are typically seated to the left of the conductor), or absolute according to some previously agreed upon frame of reference (New York City lies due west of Madrid). Direction is often indicated manually by an extended index finger or written as an arrow. On a vertically oriented sign representing a horizontal plane, such as a road sign, "forward" is usually indicated by an upward arrow. Mathematically, direction may be uniquely specified by a unit vector in a given basis, or equivalently by the angles made by the most direct path with respect to a specified set of axes.