vertex
Americannoun
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the highest point of something; apex; summit; top.
the vertex of a mountain.
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Anatomy, Zoology. the crown or top of the head.
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Craniometry. the highest point on the midsagittal plane of the skull or head viewed from the left side when the skull or head is in the Frankfurt horizontal.
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Astronomy. a point in the celestial sphere toward which or from which the common motion of a group of stars is directed.
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Geometry.
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the point farthest from the base.
the vertex of a cone or of a pyramid.
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a point in a geometrical solid common to three or more sides.
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the intersection of two sides of a plane figure.
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noun
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the highest point
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maths
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the point opposite the base of a figure
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the point of intersection of two sides of a plane figure or angle
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the point of intersection of a pencil of lines or three or more planes of a solid figure
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astronomy a point in the sky towards which a star stream appears to move
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anatomy the crown of the head
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The point at which the sides of an angle intersect.
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The point of a triangle, cone, or pyramid that is opposite to and farthest away from its base.
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A point of a polyhedron at which three or more of the edges intersect.
Other Word Forms
Noun Inflected Forms
Etymology
Origin of vertex
First recorded in 1560–70; from Latin: “a whirl, top (of the head),” equivalent to vert(ere) “to turn” + -ex (stem -ic- ) noun suffix
Explanation
If you’ve reached the vertex of something, you know it’s all downhill after that, because vertex refers to the highest point on an object, such as the top of a mountain. In its early usage vertex referred to the top of a person’s head. That meaning is still common, especially in the field of anatomy, but these days you can use the word in a broader sense to refer to the highest point of anything. Still, it’ll help you remember the meaning of vertex if you visualize the top of someone’s head — the highest point — when you think of this word. If you want to get technical, in the field of mathematics, vertex can refer to the point at which lines meet and form an angle, or to the point on a figure, such as a triangle or cone, that is opposite to its base.
Vocabulary lists containing vertex
100 SAT Words Beginning with "V"
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Geometry - Introductory
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The ACT Math Test: Geometry, List 2
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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.
Her baba aux muses verte cake was “supposed to be fully centered around Chartreuse.”
From Seattle Times • Apr. 18, 2023
A tomatillo-avocado salsa that’s less like the taqueria salsa you might expect than a complex sauce verte.
From Los Angeles Times • Feb. 1, 2018
His warm grays and brick reds, his low thick blues and his blocks of terre verte, betokened nature, suggesting planes of light on sky and sea, old stone and vegetation.
From Time Magazine Archive
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This mysterious maladie verte so distressed French Cultural Affairs Minister Andr� Malraux, an amateur archaeologist himself, that he appointed a commission of archaeologists, speleologists and other savants to save France's "prehistoric Sistine Chapel."
From Time Magazine Archive
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There should be an underwash of madder, and maybe terre verte.
From Dorothy at Oak Knowe by Raymond, Evelyn
Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.