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From: Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)

 Sym·me·try n.
 1. A due proportion of the several parts of a body to each other; adaptation of the form or dimensions of the several parts of a thing to each other; the union and conformity of the members of a work to the whole.
 2. Biol. The law of likeness; similarity of structure; regularity in form and arrangement; orderly and similar distribution of parts, such that an animal may be divided into parts which are structurally symmetrical.
 Note:Bilateral symmetry, or two-sidedness, in vertebrates, etc., is that in which the body can be divided into symmetrical halves by a vertical plane passing through the middle; radial symmetry, as in echinoderms, is that in which the individual parts are arranged symmetrically around a central axis; serial symmetry, or zonal symmetry, as in earthworms, is that in which the segments or metameres of the body are disposed in a zonal manner one after the other in a longitudinal axis. This last is sometimes called metamerism.
 3. Bot. (a) Equality in the number of parts of the successive circles in a flower. (b) Likeness in the form and size of floral organs of the same kind; regularity.
 Axis of symmetry. Geom. See under Axis.
 Respective symmetry, that disposition of parts in which only the opposite sides are equal to each other.
 

From: Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)

 Ax·is n.; pl. Axes   A straight line, real or imaginary, passing through a body, on which it revolves, or may be supposed to revolve; a line passing through a body or system around which the parts are symmetrically arranged.
 2. Math. A straight line with respect to which the different parts of a magnitude are symmetrically arranged; as, the axis of a cylinder, i. e., the axis of a cone, that is, the straight line joining the vertex and the center of the base; the axis of a circle, any straight line passing through the center.
 3. Bot. The stem; the central part, or longitudinal support, on which organs or parts are arranged; the central line of any body.
 4. Anat. (a) The second vertebra of the neck, or vertebra dentata. (b) Also used of the body only of the vertebra, which is prolonged anteriorly within the foramen of the first vertebra or atlas, so as to form the odontoid process or peg which serves as a pivot for the atlas and head to turn upon.
 5. Crystallog. One of several imaginary lines, assumed in describing the position of the planes by which a crystal is bounded.
 6. Fine Arts The primary or secondary central line of any design.
 Anticlinal axis Geol., a line or ridge from which the strata slope downward on the two opposite sides.
 Synclinal axis, a line from which the strata slope upward in opposite directions, so as to form a valley.
 Axis cylinder Anat., the neuraxis or essential, central substance of a nerve fiber; -- called also axis band, axial fiber, and cylinder axis.
 Axis in peritrochio, the wheel and axle, one of the mechanical powers.
 Axis of a curve Geom., a straight line which bisects a system of parallel chords of a curve; called a principal axis, when cutting them at right angles, in which case it divides the curve into two symmetrical portions, as in the parabola, which has one such axis, the ellipse, which has two, or the circle, which has an infinite number. The two axes of the ellipse are the major axis and the minor axis, and the two axes of the hyperbola are the transverse axis and the conjugate axis.
 Axis of a lens, the straight line passing through its center and perpendicular to its surfaces.
 Axis of a microscope or Axis of a telescope, the straight line with which coincide the axes of the several lenses which compose it.
 Axes of coördinates in a plane, two straight lines intersecting each other, to which points are referred for the purpose of determining their relative position: they are either rectangular or oblique.
 Axes of coördinates in space, the three straight lines in which the coördinate planes intersect each other.
 Axis of a balance, that line about which it turns.
 Axis of oscillation, of a pendulum, a right line passing through the center about which it vibrates, and perpendicular to the plane of vibration.
 Axis of polarization, the central line around which the prismatic rings or curves are arranged. --Brewster.
 Axis of revolution Descriptive Geom., a straight line about which some line or plane is revolved, so that the several points of the line or plane shall describe circles with their centers in the fixed line, and their planes perpendicular to it, the line describing a surface of revolution, and the plane a solid of revolution.
 Axis of symmetry Geom., any line in a plane figure which divides the figure into two such parts that one part, when folded over along the axis, shall coincide with the other part.
 Axis of the equator, ecliptic, horizon (or other circle considered with reference to the sphere on which it lies), the diameter of the sphere which is perpendicular to the plane of the circle. --Hutton.
 Axis of the Ionic capital Arch., a line passing perpendicularly through the middle of the eye of the volute.
 Neutral axis Mech., the line of demarcation between the horizontal elastic forces of tension and compression, exerted by the fibers in any cross section of a girder.
 Optic axis of a crystal, the direction in which a ray of transmitted light suffers no double refraction. All crystals, not of the isometric system, are either uniaxial or biaxial.
 Optic axis, Visual axis Opt., the straight line passing through the center of the pupil, and perpendicular to the surface of the eye.
 Radical axis of two circles Geom., the straight line perpendicular to the line joining their centers and such that the tangents from any point of it to the two circles shall be equal to each other.
 Spiral axis Arch., the axis of a twisted column drawn spirally in order to trace the circumvolutions without.
 Axis of abscissas and Axis of ordinates. See Abscissa.