Science, asked by Anonymous, 1 month ago

A locus is a set of points, in geometry, which satisfies a given condition or situation for a shape or a figure. The plural of the locus is loci. The area of theloci is called the region. The word locusis derived from the word location


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Answers

Answered by ananya4das
1

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locus derived from Latin word

(plural loci), 1715, "place, spot, locality," from Latin locus "a place, spot; appointed place, position; locality, region, country; degree, rank, order; topic, subject," from Old Latin stlocus, a word of uncertain origin. Used by Latin writers for Greek topos.

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Answered by Blink07
0

A locus is a set of points, in geometry, which satisfies a given condition or situation for a shape or a figure. The plural of the locus is loci. The area of the loci is called the region.

But in modern Maths, the entities are considered as the set of points that satisfy the given condition.

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