释义 |
Definition of bifacial in English: bifacialadjectivebʌɪˈfeɪʃ(ə)lbīˈfāSHəl 1Having two faces, surfaces, or sides. Example sentencesExamples - Lest any reader miss the point, a depiction of the bifacial god appears throughout the book.
- Over the years, some of the most successful rituals at Rites of Spring have centered around such images: a wicker figure, the Maypole, a bifacial Goddess puppet, a gigantic multi-colored web, an earthen Great Mother protruding from the ground.
- 1.1Botany (of a leaf) having upper and lower surfaces that are structurally different.
〔植〕(叶子) 异面的 Example sentencesExamples - A bifacial vascular cambium forming manoxylic secondary wood is also present.
- It possessed secondary xylem and secondary phloem, which were produced by a bifacial vascular cambium with ray and fusiform initials.
- Secondary manoxylic wood is produced by a bifacial vascular cambium and surrounds each vascular strand.
- The primary vascular system consists of a eustele and a bifacial vascular cambium.
- Their internal stem structure is characterized by a eustele with endarch protoxylem, where a small amount of manoxylic wood is produced from a bifacial vascular cambium.
- 1.2Archaeology (of a flint or other artefact) worked on both faces.
〔考古〕(燧石或其他人工制品)经两面加工的 Example sentencesExamples - Hence, when Smoky Hill jasper is present in substantial amounts in a collection, the bifacial knives are made primarily from it.
- Formed artifacts are a broadly defined category including items ranging from tested raw material to formal bifacial implements.
- Excluded from the small tool category are hafted bifaces, hoes/adzes, large, ovate disk scrapers, chert hammerstones, larger chisels, wedges, and large bifacial knives/scrapers.
- This small-tool tradition excludes the better-known large bifacial tools of this period and all core tools.
- What he did find at the workshops were hammer stones, blocked-out bifaces, thinned bifacial blanks, and bladelet cores and bladelets.
Definition of bifacial in US English: bifacialadjectivebīˈfāSHəl 1Having two faces, surfaces, or sides. Example sentencesExamples - Lest any reader miss the point, a depiction of the bifacial god appears throughout the book.
- Over the years, some of the most successful rituals at Rites of Spring have centered around such images: a wicker figure, the Maypole, a bifacial Goddess puppet, a gigantic multi-colored web, an earthen Great Mother protruding from the ground.
- 1.1Botany (of a leaf) having upper and lower surfaces that are structurally different.
〔植〕(叶子) 异面的 Example sentencesExamples - Their internal stem structure is characterized by a eustele with endarch protoxylem, where a small amount of manoxylic wood is produced from a bifacial vascular cambium.
- A bifacial vascular cambium forming manoxylic secondary wood is also present.
- Secondary manoxylic wood is produced by a bifacial vascular cambium and surrounds each vascular strand.
- It possessed secondary xylem and secondary phloem, which were produced by a bifacial vascular cambium with ray and fusiform initials.
- The primary vascular system consists of a eustele and a bifacial vascular cambium.
- 1.2Archaeology (of a flint or other artifact) worked on both faces.
〔考古〕(燧石或其他人工制品)经两面加工的 Example sentencesExamples - Excluded from the small tool category are hafted bifaces, hoes/adzes, large, ovate disk scrapers, chert hammerstones, larger chisels, wedges, and large bifacial knives/scrapers.
- This small-tool tradition excludes the better-known large bifacial tools of this period and all core tools.
- What he did find at the workshops were hammer stones, blocked-out bifaces, thinned bifacial blanks, and bladelet cores and bladelets.
- Formed artifacts are a broadly defined category including items ranging from tested raw material to formal bifacial implements.
- Hence, when Smoky Hill jasper is present in substantial amounts in a collection, the bifacial knives are made primarily from it.
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