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Definition of Two-dimensionality
1. Noun. The property of having two dimensions.
Generic synonyms: Dimensionality
Derivative terms: Flat, Flat, Flat, Plane, Two-dimensional
Lexicographical Neighbors of Two-dimensionality
Literary usage of Two-dimensionality
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Einstein's Theories of Relativity and Gravitation: A Selection of Material by James Malcolm Bird, Albert Einstein (1921)
"This emphasizes the true nature of the two-dimensionality which is the fundamental
characteristic of the plane (and of other things, as we shall directly ..."
2. Architecture and Urbanization in Colonial Chiapas, Mexico by Sidney David Markman (1984)
"... not unlike that which occurs in Spain, with its preference for the square,
the cube and horizontality in volumes as well as a flat two-dimensionality, ..."
3. Abel's Theorem and the Allied Theory: Including the Theory of the Theta by Henry Frederick Baker (1897)
"... there corresponds only one set of values for e,, ..., efi the places zlt ...,zp
are also, each of them, variable within a certain two-dimensionality. ..."
4. Psychology of the Other-one: An Introductory Text-book of Psychology by Max Friedrich Meyer (1922)
"That the skin is curved over the body, obviously does not change its functional
two-dimensionality. We therefore say that the space perception on the skin ..."
5. The Enclosed Garden: History and Development of the Hortus Conclusus and Its by Rob Aben, Saskia de Wit (1999)
"The gallery sets a rhythmic and spatial layering against the two-dimensionality
of the walls and the ground plane.The soberness and uniformity of the ..."
6. Corinthian Hellenistic Pottery by G. Roger Edwards (1975)
"... last quarters of the 3rd century BC Needless to say, in the late years of the
Later Phase the rendering of these motifs reverts to two-dimensionality. ..."
7. Power and Market by Murray N. Rothbard (2006)
"Paterson has a stimulating discussion of the "two-dimensionality"—neglect of real
conditions—in the theory of collective ownership. ..."