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Onto

Onto is a preposition and an adverb in English. It conveys movement toward and onto a surface, or the action of landing on and staying on that surface. It is used with verbs of motion and with phrases describing destination or position, as in “The cat jumped onto the sofa” and “She stepped onto the platform.”

Word usage distinctions: In many contexts of motion, onto indicates arriving on top of something. In phrases

Mathematics: In mathematics, onto is short for surjective. A function f: A -> B is onto (surjective)

Etymology: The term originates from the fusion of “on” and “to” in Old English and Middle English,

that
denote
progression
to
another
task,
the
two-word
form
“on
to”
is
often
used,
as
in
“She
went
on
to
explain.”
Some
style
guides
advise
using
onto
for
physical
movement
and
on
to
for
sequential
transitions,
but
practice
varies.
if
every
element
of
B
has
a
preimage
in
A;
equivalently,
the
range
of
f
equals
B.
Examples:
The
function
f(x)
=
x^3
is
onto
R;
f(x)
=
e^x
maps
R
onto
(0,
∞)
and
is
not
onto
R.
transitioning
to
a
single
word
by
the
modern
period.
It
is
etymologically
a
literal
combination
indicating
movement
onto
a
surface.