Definition of Bipolarity

1. n. Bipolar quality.

Definition of Bipolarity

1. Noun. The state of being bipolar ¹

¹ Source: wiktionary.com

Definition of Bipolarity

1. [n -TIES]

Medical Definition of Bipolarity

1. Bipolar quality. Source: Websters Dictionary (01 Mar 1998)

Lexicographical Neighbors of Bipolarity

bipod
bipods
bipolar
bipolar cautery
bipolar cell
bipolar disease
bipolar disorder
bipolar filament
bipolar illness
bipolar lead
bipolar neuron
bipolar psychosis
bipolar version
bipolarities
bipolarity (current term)
bipolarization
bipolarizations
bipolarize
bipolarized
bipolarizes
bipolarizing
bipolaron
bipolaronic
bipolarons
bipole
bipoles
bipolymer
bipolymers
bipotent

Literary usage of Bipolarity

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. Science by American Association for the Advancement of Science (1898)
"THE SUPPOSED bipolarity OF POLA.B FAUNAS. DE. JOHN MURR AY, in a recent paper,* again mentions the supposed general likeness of a large number of ..."

2. American Medicine (1913)
"This bipolarity is renewed in the vacillation between masochism and sadism, ... Another case analyzed by Stekel showed this bipolarity with reference to dry ..."

3. Instinct in Man: A Contribution to the Psychology of Education by James Drever (1921)
"At first sight it would seem as if the solution of the difficulty were easy along the lines of our view of the bipolarity of the emotional phase. ..."

4. Nuclear Coexistence: Rethinking U. S. Policy to Promote Stability in an Era by William C. Martel, William T. Pendley (1998)
"For at least two decades, in many areas the concept of bipolarity was passe' ... But bipolarity is relevant, however, in the narrow military sense of a ..."

5. Fecundation in Plants by David Myers Mottier (1904)
"The bipolarity of the multipolar spindle now gradually manifests itself, ... F, a multipolar complex in which bipolarity has begun to manifest itself; ..."

6. The Zoological Record ...: Being Records of Zoological Literature by Zoological Record Association (London, England), Zoological Society of London (1900)
"O. hastatum, evidence for bipolarity ; THOMPSON (230) p. 321. 0. pacificum, n. sp., 5° 43' N., 85° 50" W., 978 fms., and many other stations of 'Albatross'; ..."

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