'Place' is a term that has a variety of meanings in a dictionary sense, but which is principally used in a
geographic sense as a noun to denote location, though in a sense of a location identified with that which is located there. For instance, much has been written about the "
sense of place", a well-known
phenomenon in human society in which people strongly identify with a particular geographical area or location.
Place identity concerns significance and meanings that particular places have for their inhabitants and users. Another instance of its use is as an identifier of a location that is noted for a particular characteristic, such as
Stonehenge defining its location as a unique 'place'. It may refer to something as
macroscopic as, say,
New York City, or something as specific as a spot on a shelf. However, in most Wikipedia articles that use it as a link, it is referring to location in a geographic, and not a specific
placement, sense. The
United States Census Bureau defines the term
place as a concentration of population.
[1]
'Place' may also refer to:
'Concepts:'
★ In
sociology, place, for a person, may indicate not only location, but position in society, relative wealth, status, and so forth. Place may also refer to an individual's or family's relative status and relationship as compared to other individuals, groups, or families. Elements that turn space into a place are memories, feelings, social connections and the presence of others, cultural rules and conventions
★ In
city planning, a place is a generic used to designate a public square or small
park; see also the cognate terms
plaza and
piazza; in English-speaking countries, the name may also be used as the generic for a
street
★ In
marketing, place refers to one of the so-called 4 Ps, defined as "the market place"; it can mean a geographic location, an industry, a group of people (a segment) to whom a company wants to sell its products or services, such as young professional women (e.g. for selling cosmetics) or middle-aged family men (e.g. for selling family cars)
★ In computer science, a place can refer to a
container that can contain data, as in "a place to store transactions"; its most prominent usage occurs in technical literature translated from the German Language (i.e.
Petri net)
★ In numeral systems, place can refer to the position of a
digit in a number, for example,
one's place or ten's place
★
Place, in algebraic mathematics, is an equivalence relation defined on absolute values of an integral domain or field
★
Locus (Latin for "place", plural ''loci''), in geometric mathematics, a collection of points which share a property
★ Places, in
theatre and
film, the call given to the performers and production team to send them to their "starting positions" for a scene, act, or shot
★ Place, in
philosophy, a topographical concept that stands in opposition to
space
★
Place setting, a table setting for a single diner
'People and places:'
★
Ullin Place, a philosopher
★
Placé, a commune in
Pays de la Loire, France
★
Godfrey Place (1921–1994), British naval officer
★
Martha M. Place (1855?–1899), American murderer
References
★
Relph, E (1976), ''Place and Placelessness'' ISBN 0850860555
★
Doreen Massey
See also
★
★
★
Placement (disambiguation)
★
Set (disambiguation)