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Definition of Dimensional
1. Adjective. Of or relating to dimensions.
2. Adjective. Having dimension--the quality or character or stature proper to a person. "Never matures as a dimensional character; he is pasty, bland, faceless"
Definition of Dimensional
1. a. Pertaining to dimension.
Definition of Dimensional
1. Adjective. Of or pertaining to dimensions. ¹
2. Adjective. (comparable) Having dimension or dimensions; three-dimensional. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Dimensional
1. [adj]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Dimensional
Literary usage of Dimensional
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Projective Geometry by Oswald Veblen, John Wesley Young (1918)
"Now a regulus is a one•dimensional form of the second degree,* and the notion of
one•dimensional projective transformation has been extended to all the ..."
2. Relativity: The Special and General Theory by Albert Einstein (1921)
"And yet there is no more common-place statement than that the world in which we
live is a four-dimensional space-time continuum. ..."
3. Catalogue of Scientific Papers, 1800-1900: Subject Indexby Royal Society (Great Britain), Herbert McLeod by Royal Society (Great Britain), Herbert McLeod (1908)
"3-dimensional varieties. Cotton, E. Toul. Fac. Sc. A. 1 (1899) 385-. ...
Generalisation to ^-dimensional space of transformation of line into surface ..."
4. The Monist by Hegeler Institute (1907)
"dimension, then certain results must follow which can be demonstrated in the
three-dimensional world—then demonstrate them. For instance, if a space be ..."
5. Evolution, racial and habitudinal by John Thomas Gulick (1905)
"Dimensional isolation arises when local varieties of birds and mammals, ...
Dimensional and structural isolation are terms that convey a fairly definite ..."
6. The Cambridge Colloquium 1916 by Griffith Conrad Evans, Oswald Veblen (1918)
"CHAPTER II TWO-Dimensional COMPLEXES AND MANIFOLDS Fundamental Definitions 1.
In a Euclidean space three non-collinear points and the segments which join ..."
7. The Fourth Dimension Simply Explained: A Collection of Essays Selected from by Henry Parker Manning (1910)
"In the same way, we, three dimensional beings, cannot move in four-dimensional
space, but we can, by reasoning, find out what a four-dimensional being would ..."