well the nice feature of mathematics is that the authors DO usually tell you what the words mean before they use them, whereas other people do not. You for example used != without telling me what it meant.
so beware that not all mathematicians use the same words in the same sense, and remember to look up in each book, what the words mean there.
of course mathematicians are sometimes guilty also of not defining their terms. One story that affected me was this: In a research paper I wrote I referred to a certain property as due to another mathematician and cited his paper. Then I gave it a name, but not the name he had given it. He in fact had given it no name. I did not make this clear. I said "the concept of such and such defined so and so, is due to whoever". I meant the definition itself, not the name, was due to whoever.
Apparently many people read my paper and not his, to learn this concept. As a result my name became the standard one in use for this concept. Thus when these people cited this concept, who had learned it in my paper instead of his, they did not realize that the name I was using was not his, and called it by my given name, yet referred to his paper for it.
Therefore anyone reading those people's works, and trying to find out what the name meant, looked in whoever's paper instead of mine for something by that name, but could not find it, because the name did not occur there. Thus the people using my chosen name should have explained exactly what it meant when they reused it, rather than referring people to a source where it could not be found. And they should have checked the source they gave to see if what they were citing could actually be found there.
Your author Richard Penney, should probably have said, "we are going to give a non standard definition of the term 'orthogonal', so beware that other authors do not include the property that all vectors are !=0" (where the symbol "!=0" means not equal to zero.)
Of course since he resides at your school, to find out the answer to the mystery, you only have to ask him yourself. try it. it is often worthwhile to at least speak to the professors.