释义 |
Definition of bifurcation in English: bifurcationnoun bʌɪfəˈkeɪʃ(ə)nˌbaɪfərˈkeɪʃən mass noun1The division of something into two branches or parts. 分枝,分支,分叉 the bifurcation of the profession Example sentencesExamples - In many ways there was a kind of bifurcation of social history in the field of Latin America.
- Under conditions of global strategic bifurcation, the old distinctions between civil and international conflict, between internal and external security, and between national and societal security began to erode.
- We reject the habitual bifurcation of the researcher's image into ‘the economist’ and ‘the sociologist.’
- Under these conditions, the traditional bifurcation between what a government may lawfully do in peace time, and what powers it may claim in war time, no longer make much sense.
- The Parliament on Tuesday gave its approval for bifurcation of the Trust into two companies.
- We have had many bifurcations after the revolution in 1979.
- One keeps wondering what the author, in his chapter on Mexican-Americans, means by ‘cultural bifurcation.’
- But there was a price to be paid, one of fragmentation, or at least bifurcation.
- This perceptual bifurcation is anything but a liberal tendency.
- Perhaps this parallel interhuman development, this bifurcation in the value of communication, is most telling.
- Both play and opera form an examination of the neurotic bifurcation between fantasy and action.
- History and textual theory continue to constitute the principal bifurcation in literary studies, and those two methods of inquiry frequently elicit professions of faith rather than reasoned argumentation.
- In tandem with these developments, however, there emerged a form of bifurcation in the handling of the group as a concept and organisation.
- In this connection, he also reiterated the demand for bifurcation of the Cement Factory from the parent organisation.
- The history of playing from 1610 to the closure of 1642 is one of gradual bifurcation into two traditions centred on two types of venue: the open-air amphitheatres and the indoor hall playhouses.
- It could yet seek to recreate that bifurcation with a ‘business only’ upgrade and give the Home line its own range of updates.
- So we see bifurcation between classical languages used by the former, such as Persian, Sanskrit and English, and the regional languages and dialects that the common folk used.
- However, she does not accept his theory of class bifurcation as the sole element in the perpetuation of class bifurcation.
- To be sure, each superhero whose life is marked by the invariable bifurcation between ‘secret’ identities inevitably touches down upon the theme of the fractured self and psyche.
- This cultural bifurcation is aggravated by the fact that between our two warfighting cultures, one human-centric and one technology-centric, the latter currently predominates.
Synonyms separation, dividing, parting, forking, branching - 1.1count noun Either of two branches into which something divides.
(分枝之)一枝,(分支之)一支,(分叉之)一叉 Example sentencesExamples - A bifurcation here allows cars to race ahead through another tunnel.
- For this calculation, the polytomies in the tree had to be resolved into bifurcations by introducing minute branch lengths.
- Note that this is not the complete bifurcation diagram, because bifurcations involving unstable or negative equilibria are not included.
- As each plant had a bifurcation (two branches), two measurements were obtained per leaf stage for each plant.
- Under constant population size, the most ancient coalescence times tend to be long relative to branches of the tree associated with more recent bifurcations.
- First alveolar duct bifurcations have been shown to be a primary site of deposition for particulate matter and gaseous pollutants.
- At the park itself my run of bifurcations comes to an end as there are only three gates from which to choose.
- Some bifurcations appear to join with those below to form a thin, filamentous network.
- The Northern line, with its bifurcations and branches, is similar.
- To simplify the diagram, some nonsignificant bifurcations were removed.
- This mechanism explains primary accumulation features, including the formation of dome structures, the geometrical relationship between bifurcations and domes, and the occurrence of chromitite layers on a variety of scales.
- The overall morphology of the colony was not observed, but it is presumed to have been bushy based on the size and shape of the branches and branch bifurcations.
- We point to the mechanisms resulting in different types of bifurcations and show how they are influenced by noise.
- They give way to secondary branches and multiple bifurcations that reflect the path of dielectric breakdown within the soil-gravel horizon.
- However, it is unclear whether these paired last branches are due to poor preservation or to an original bifurcation.
- It is the most common endobronchial lesion associated with HIV and has a characteristic red or purple macular or papular appearance often located at airway bifurcations.
- Since the gene genealogy is rooted, all the mutations and bifurcations are also time ordered from top to bottom.
- A writhing mass of white snow-snakes hissed, crawling from hidden cracks and crevasses in the bifurcations of the cave-rocks.
- Damage is greatest in arterial bifurcations, deviations, and constrictions where turbulence is intense.
- They consist of small bifurcations some centimeters in size.
Definition of bifurcation in US English: bifurcationnounˌbīfərˈkāSHənˌbaɪfərˈkeɪʃən 1The division of something into two branches or parts. 分枝,分支,分叉 the bifurcation of the profession into social do-gooders and self-serving iconoclasts Example sentencesExamples - One keeps wondering what the author, in his chapter on Mexican-Americans, means by ‘cultural bifurcation.’
- But there was a price to be paid, one of fragmentation, or at least bifurcation.
- We have had many bifurcations after the revolution in 1979.
- It could yet seek to recreate that bifurcation with a ‘business only’ upgrade and give the Home line its own range of updates.
- In many ways there was a kind of bifurcation of social history in the field of Latin America.
- Both play and opera form an examination of the neurotic bifurcation between fantasy and action.
- The Parliament on Tuesday gave its approval for bifurcation of the Trust into two companies.
- In this connection, he also reiterated the demand for bifurcation of the Cement Factory from the parent organisation.
- In tandem with these developments, however, there emerged a form of bifurcation in the handling of the group as a concept and organisation.
- We reject the habitual bifurcation of the researcher's image into ‘the economist’ and ‘the sociologist.’
- So we see bifurcation between classical languages used by the former, such as Persian, Sanskrit and English, and the regional languages and dialects that the common folk used.
- This cultural bifurcation is aggravated by the fact that between our two warfighting cultures, one human-centric and one technology-centric, the latter currently predominates.
- History and textual theory continue to constitute the principal bifurcation in literary studies, and those two methods of inquiry frequently elicit professions of faith rather than reasoned argumentation.
- To be sure, each superhero whose life is marked by the invariable bifurcation between ‘secret’ identities inevitably touches down upon the theme of the fractured self and psyche.
- The history of playing from 1610 to the closure of 1642 is one of gradual bifurcation into two traditions centred on two types of venue: the open-air amphitheatres and the indoor hall playhouses.
- Perhaps this parallel interhuman development, this bifurcation in the value of communication, is most telling.
- However, she does not accept his theory of class bifurcation as the sole element in the perpetuation of class bifurcation.
- Under conditions of global strategic bifurcation, the old distinctions between civil and international conflict, between internal and external security, and between national and societal security began to erode.
- This perceptual bifurcation is anything but a liberal tendency.
- Under these conditions, the traditional bifurcation between what a government may lawfully do in peace time, and what powers it may claim in war time, no longer make much sense.
Synonyms separation, dividing, parting, forking, branching - 1.1 Either of two branches into which something divides.
(分枝之)一枝,(分支之)一支,(分叉之)一叉 right aortic bifurcation nodes were seen Example sentencesExamples - At the park itself my run of bifurcations comes to an end as there are only three gates from which to choose.
- It is the most common endobronchial lesion associated with HIV and has a characteristic red or purple macular or papular appearance often located at airway bifurcations.
- For this calculation, the polytomies in the tree had to be resolved into bifurcations by introducing minute branch lengths.
- As each plant had a bifurcation (two branches), two measurements were obtained per leaf stage for each plant.
- Some bifurcations appear to join with those below to form a thin, filamentous network.
- A writhing mass of white snow-snakes hissed, crawling from hidden cracks and crevasses in the bifurcations of the cave-rocks.
- Damage is greatest in arterial bifurcations, deviations, and constrictions where turbulence is intense.
- To simplify the diagram, some nonsignificant bifurcations were removed.
- Under constant population size, the most ancient coalescence times tend to be long relative to branches of the tree associated with more recent bifurcations.
- Since the gene genealogy is rooted, all the mutations and bifurcations are also time ordered from top to bottom.
- They consist of small bifurcations some centimeters in size.
- The overall morphology of the colony was not observed, but it is presumed to have been bushy based on the size and shape of the branches and branch bifurcations.
- However, it is unclear whether these paired last branches are due to poor preservation or to an original bifurcation.
- They give way to secondary branches and multiple bifurcations that reflect the path of dielectric breakdown within the soil-gravel horizon.
- We point to the mechanisms resulting in different types of bifurcations and show how they are influenced by noise.
- A bifurcation here allows cars to race ahead through another tunnel.
- First alveolar duct bifurcations have been shown to be a primary site of deposition for particulate matter and gaseous pollutants.
- This mechanism explains primary accumulation features, including the formation of dome structures, the geometrical relationship between bifurcations and domes, and the occurrence of chromitite layers on a variety of scales.
- The Northern line, with its bifurcations and branches, is similar.
- Note that this is not the complete bifurcation diagram, because bifurcations involving unstable or negative equilibria are not included.
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