longitudinal

English

Etymology

From Middle English longitudinal, from Latin longitūdin-, oblique stem of longitūdō (length, longitude), equivalent to longitude + -al.

Pronunciation

Adjective

longitudinal (not comparable)

  1. Relating to length, or to longitude.
    1. (Can we add an example for this sense?)
  2. Running in the direction of the long axis of a body.
  3. Forward and/or backward, relative to some defined direction.
  4. (sciences and social sciences, of a study) Sampling data over time rather than merely once.

Antonyms

Derived terms

Translations

Noun

longitudinal (plural longitudinals)

  1. Any longitudinal piece, as in shipbuilding etc.
    1. A railway sleeper lying parallel with the rail.

French

Adjective

longitudinal (feminine singular longitudinale, masculine plural longitudinaux, feminine plural longitudinales)

  1. longitudinal

Spanish

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /lonxitudiˈnal/, [lõŋxit̪uðiˈnal]

Adjective

longitudinal (plural longitudinales)

  1. longitudinal (relating to length or longitude)
  2. longitudinal (sampling data over time)
    • 2001, Psicología infantil, Grupo Planeta (GBS) →ISBN, page 80
      El número de años que requiere un estudio longitudinal puede variar considerablemente.
      The number of years required by a longitudinal study may vary considerably.

Further reading

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