ubication
The condition or fact of being in, or occupying, a certain place or position; whereness, ubiety; also, a location.
Noun
- The condition or fact of being in, or occupying, a certain place or position; whereness, ubiety; also, a location.
- We conceiue these modifications if the thing, like substances; and…we call them by substantiue names, Whitenesse, Action, Vbication, Duration, &c. - 1644, Digby, Nat. Soule, v., §9., 400
- Relations, Ubications, Duration, the vulgar Philosophy admits into the list of something. - 1661, Glanvill, Van Dogm., 101
- They are accustomed to think that Ubication, or the being in a Place, is but an Accident to a Substance. - 1699, 39 Art., Burnet, xxviii. (1700), 324:
Origin
Borrowed from New Latin ubicātiō (“location”) (whence Portuguese ubicação and Spanish ubicación; compare the inflected forms ubicātiōnis, ubicātiōnī, etc.) + -ion. Ubicātiō is derived from Latin ubicātus (“located”) + -iō (suffix forming abstract nouns); while ubicātus is a past participial form of ubicō (“to situate”) (found in British works from the 14th century), from ubi (“where”) (ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *kʷ- (primary interrogative root)) + -ō (suffix forming regular first-conjugation verbs). By surface analysis, ubicate + -ion (ubicate is probably a back-formation from ubication). Later occurrences are influenced by Spanish ubicación, hence their use chiefly in Spanish contexts.