I doubt there's such a thing. You can say a reduced-dimensionality space,
perhaps, but in that case "dimensionality" is attached to "reduced" not to "space".
"Reduced-dimensionality" space is a space which has a smaller dimension with respect to some other space.
What's the dimension of a space? 
Typically, one refers to the dimension of a vector space.
1 - A vector space is a set of elements called vectors such that the sum of two elements is still in the set, and one can multiply each element by a real number and still get an element of the set.
2 - A subset (of cardinality k, with elements v_1,...,v_k) of a vector space V is said to be linearly independent if there are no nonzero real numbers c_1,...,c_k such that c_1*v_1+...+c_k*v_k=0
(remember that you can multiply vectors by numbers, and you can sum vectors, so the above makes sense. 0 means the 0 vector.)
3 - The cardinality of the biggest possible such subset of V is the dimension of V.
Example:
For example you can give the plane the structure of a vector space by choosing on it coordinates (x,y).
one possible linearly independent subset of the plane is given by the two vectors (1,0) and (0,1). Indeed it is not possible to find non-zero c_1,c_2 such that
c_1*(1,0)+c2*(0,1)=(0,0)
It turns out that you cannot build bigger linearly independent subsets of the plane : 
hence it is a vector space of dimension 2.
You can read this: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linear_independence and go on hopping on Wikipedia.
                    
                
                 
Just to clarify: Are you asking for the dimensionality as in topology/algebra or that one in data mining/language processing?
You will maybe have more success if you ask this question at http://mathoverflow.net/
"Dimensionality space" as from vector algebra.