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asymptote

American  
[as-im-toht] / ˈæs ɪmˌtoʊt /

noun

Mathematics.
  1. a straight line approached by a given curve as one of the variables in the equation of the curve approaches infinity.


asymptote British  
/ ˈæsɪmˌtəʊt /

noun

  1. a straight line that is closely approached by a plane curve so that the perpendicular distance between them decreases to zero as the distance from the origin increases to infinity

"Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged" 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

asymptote Scientific  
/ ăsĭm-tōt′ /
  1. A line whose distance to a given curve tends to zero. An asymptote may or may not intersect its associated curve.


Etymology

Origin of asymptote

1650–60; < Greek asýmptōtos, equivalent to a- a- 6 + sýmptōtos falling together ( sym- sym- + ptōtós falling, derivative of ptō-, variant stem of píptein to fall + -tos verbid suffix)

Explanation

In geometry, an asymptote of a curve is a straight line that gets closer and closer but never touches the curve. An asymptote is sometimes called a tangent. This is a term you're most likely to come across in math class. An asymptote is a straight line, but specifically one that approaches or nears a curve but never meets it. The noun asymptote has been a geometry term since the 1600's, and it comes from the Greek root asymptotos, or "not falling together," which combines a, "not," syn, "with," and ptotos, "fallen."

Keep Reading on Vocabulary.com

Vocabulary lists containing asymptote

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

No. A horizontal asymptote would suggest a limit on the range, and the range of any logarithmic function in general form is all real numbers.

From Textbooks • Dec. 21, 2021

Do they all have the same vertical asymptote?

From Textbooks • Sep. 23, 2020

Notice the x-axis is the horizontal asymptote for the exponential functions and the y-axis is the vertical asymptote for the logarithmic functions.

From Textbooks • May 6, 2020

When the graph approaches the y-axis so very closely but will never cross it, we call the line x = 0, the y-axis, a vertical asymptote.

From Textbooks • May 6, 2020

The attempt to realise the asymptote in human mathematics was not quite successful, too near an approach to John Bull generally assimilating Jeshurun away.

From The Grandchildren of the Ghetto by Zangwill, Israel