# PlanetPhysics/Parameter

Perhaps because of its ring of technical authority', it has been used more generally in recent years to refer to any factor that determines a range of variations and especially to a factor that restricts what can result from a process or policy. In this use it often comes close to meaning "a limit or boundary." Some of these new uses have a clear connection to the technical senses of the word. For example, the provisions of a zoning ordinance that limit the height or density of new construction can be reasonably likened to mathematical parameters that establish the limits of other variables. Therefore one can say : "The zoning commission announced new planning parameters for the historic district of the city". But other uses go one step further and treat parameter as a high-toned synonym for characteristic'. There are several difficulties with the nontechnical use of the word parameter' that may arise from its resemblance to the word perimeter', with which it shares the sense "limit," though the precise meanings of the two words differ markedly. This confusion probably explains the use of parameter' in a \htmladdnormallink{sentence {http://planetphysics.us/encyclopedia/Formula.html} such as "U.S. forces report that the parameters of the mine area in the Gulf are fairly well established", where the word perimeter' would have expressed the intended sense more exactly.}
Other, rarer, confusion occurs when the old English spelling of parametre' --originating from the French word param\etre'-- is employed instead of the now utilized spelling of parameter' by non-native English speakers using out-of-date English dictionaries.