Orientation (geometry)

Proper right and proper left

Proper right and proper left are conceptual terms used to unambiguously convey relative direction when describing an image or other object. The "proper right" hand of a figure is the hand that would be regarded by that figure as its right hand. In a frontal representation, that appears on the left as the viewer sees it, creating the potential for ambiguity if the hand is just described as the "right hand". The terms are mainly used in discussing images of humans, whether in art history, medical contexts such as x-ray images, or elsewhere, but they can be used in describing any object that has an unambiguous front and back (for example furniture) or, when describing things that move or change position, with reference to the original position. However a more restricted use may be preferred, and the internal instructions for cataloguing objects in the "Inventory of American Sculpture" at the Smithsonian American Art Museum say that "The terms "proper right" and "proper left" should be used when describing figures only". In heraldry, right and left is always used in the meaning of proper right and proper left, as for the imaginary bearer of a coat of arms; to avoid confusion, the Latin terms dexter and sinister are often used. The alternative is to use language that makes it clear that the viewer's perspective is being used. The swords in the illustrations might be described as: "to the left as the viewer sees it", "at the view's left", "at the viewer's left", and so on. However these formulations do not work for freestanding sculpture in the round, where the viewer might be at any position around the sculpture. A British 19th-century manual for military drill contrasts "proper left" with "present left" when discussing the orientation of formations performing intricate movements on a parade ground, "proper" meaning the orientation at the start of the drill. The terms are analogous to the nautical port and starboard, where "port" is to a watercraft as "proper left" is to a sculpture, and they are used for essentially the same reason. Their use obviates the need for potentially ambiguous language such as "my right," "your left," and so on, by expressing the direction in a manner that holds true regardless of the relative orientations of the object and observer. Another example is stage right and left in the theatre, which uses the actor's orientation, "stage right" equating to the audience's "house left". (Wikipedia).

Proper right and proper left
Video thumbnail

The Sine Rule (3 of 3: When is it useful?)

More resources available at www.misterwootube.com

From playlist Non-right-angled Trigonometry

Video thumbnail

pythagorean problem 2

Look through a tricky shape to find the right angles

From playlist Middle School - Worked Examples

Video thumbnail

Trigonometry Review (Review of Trigonometric Ratios)

More resources available at www.misterwootube.com

From playlist Non-right-angled Trigonometry

Video thumbnail

Trig Ratios Can be Extended to the Coordinate Plane

We can extend our trig ratios onto the coordinate plane and it is still consistent with right triangle trig, isn't that amazing? #trig

From playlist Trigonometry

Video thumbnail

Learn about Trigonometric Ratios - Live

Watch live in my classroom as I teach a short lesson on trigonometric ratios

From playlist Live Lectures

Video thumbnail

Review Questions (Right-Angled Triangle Trigonometry)

More resources available at www.misterwootube.com

From playlist Non-right-angled Trigonometry

Video thumbnail

Proof: Ideal of a Ring is Proper iff it has no Units | Abstract Algebra

An ideal of a ring with identity is proper if and only if the ideal contains no units of the ring. We prove this result in today's abstract algebra video lesson! Remember that an ideal, I, of a ring, R, is an additive subgroup of I such that for all r in R and x in I, r*x and x*r are also

From playlist Abstract Algebra

Video thumbnail

Lecture 4 | Quantum Entanglements, Part 3 (Stanford)

Lecture 4 of Leonard Susskind's course concentrating on Quantum Entanglements (Part 3, Spring 2007). Recorded April 30, 2007 at Stanford University. This Stanford Continuing Studies course is the third of a three-quarter sequence of classes exploring the "quantum entanglements" in moder

From playlist Lecture Collection | Quantum Entanglements: Part 3 (Spring 2007)

Video thumbnail

Étale cohomology - 10/6/2020

Extension by zero, compactly supported cohomology, beginning of proper base change

From playlist Étale cohomology and the Weil conjectures

Video thumbnail

Bearings Example (1 of 2: Understanding the situation)

More resources available at www.misterwootube.com

From playlist Non-right-angled Trigonometry

Video thumbnail

Power Query M Code Custom Function to Convert 12 Cross Tabulated Data Sheets to PivotTable. EMT 1621

Download Excel Start File: https://excelisfun.net/files/EMT1621-Start.xlsx Download Excel Finished File: https://excelisfun.net/files/EMT1621-Finished.xlsx Learn how to take 12 Excel Worksheets with cross tabulated tables and convert them to a proper data set and then a PivotTable Report

From playlist Excel Accounting Playlist Of Videos

Video thumbnail

Set Theory (Part 14): Real Numbers as Dedekind Cuts

Please feel free to leave comments/questions on the video and practice problems below! In this video, we will construct the real number system as special subsets of rational numbers called Dedekind cuts. The trichotomy law and least upper bound property of the reals will also be proven. T

From playlist Set Theory by Mathoma

Video thumbnail

Proper Actions and Representation Theory Part 1

Professor Toshiyuki Kobayashi, University of Tokyo, Japan

From playlist Distinguished Visitors Lecture Series

Video thumbnail

Introduction to Vertex Coloring and the Chromatic Number of a Graph

This video introduces vertex coloring and provides example of how to determine the chromatic number of a graph. mathispower4u.com

From playlist Graph Theory (Discrete Math)

Video thumbnail

Categorical non-properness in wrapped Floer theory - Sheel Ganatra

Joint IAS/Princeton/Montreal/Paris/Tel-Aviv Symplectic Geometry Topic: Categorical non-properness in wrapped Floer theory Speaker: Sheel Ganatra Affiliation: University of Southern California Date: April 02, 2021 For more video please visit http://video.ias.edu

From playlist Mathematics

Video thumbnail

Basic Excel Business Analytics #12: Raw Data, Data, Proper Data Sets and Data Terminology

Download files: https://people.highline.edu/mgirvin/AllClasses/348/348/AllFilesBI348Analytics.htm Learn about Raw Data, Data, Proper Data Sets and Data Terminology: 1) (00:17) Introduction 2) (00:36) What is Raw Data? 3) (01:33) What is Data? 4) (01:55) Data Types and Default Alignment in

From playlist Excel Business Analytics (Forecasting, Linear Programming, Simulation & more) Free Course at YouTube (75 Videos)

Video thumbnail

E-DAB 02: Data, Proper Data Sets, Excel Tables, Logical Tests, More

Download Start Files: https://people.highline.edu/mgirvin/AllClasses/348/MSPTDA/Content/EDAB/E-DAB-02-Start-DataTablesFilterLogicTest.xlsx Download Finished Files: https://people.highline.edu/mgirvin/AllClasses/348/MSPTDA/Content/EDAB/E-DAB-02-Finished-DataTablesFilterLogicTest.xlsx Pdf no

From playlist Excel Data Analysis Tricks

Video thumbnail

Trig - Right triangles and complementary angles

What do we mean when we say that a right triangle has complementary angles?

From playlist Trigonometry

Related pages

Dexter and sinister | Ring theory | Port and starboard