dichotomy

名词 n.
/daɪˈkɒtəmi/|/dɪ-/    /daɪˈkɑtəmi/|[-ɾə-]|/dɑeˈkɔt.ə.mi/|[dɑe̯ˈkɔɾ.ə.mi]

英文释义

名词 n.
  1. A separation or division into two; a distinction that results in such a division. countable,uncountable
    — The dichotomy between the private and the public is central to almost two centuries of feminist writing and political struggle; it is, ultimately, what the feminist movement is all about. Although some feminists treat the dichotomy as a universal, trans-historical and trans-cultural feature of human existence, feminist criticism is primarily directed at the separation and opposition between the public and private spheres in liberal theory and practice.
  2. Such a division involving apparently incompatible or opposite principles; a duality. countable,uncountable
    — But we do not try to characterize the top and bottom parts of the brain in terms of a simple dichotomy or set of dichotomies, which was exactly what was done with the existing and well-known division of the brain into two halves: namely the left versus the right, the dominant pop-culture brain story of the last few decades. […] The dif­ferences between the left and right sides of the brain are nuanced, and simple, sweeping dichotomies do not in fact explain how the two sides function.
  3. The division of a class into two disjoint subclasses that are together comprehensive, as the division of human into female and male. countable,uncountable
    — But in the fallacy of false dichotomy, not only do the two alternatives fail to be jointly exhaustive, but they are not even likely. As a result, the disjunctive premise is false, or at least probably false.
  4. The division of a genus into two species; a division into two subordinate parts. countable,uncountable
  5. A phase of the moon when it appears half lit and half dark, for example at the quadratures. countable,uncountable
    — The Ides of Januarius indeed, the preceding month, must have fallen on March 1 at midnight, two days before the first dichotomy of the mean new moon of that month, March 3 at midnight.
  6. Division and subdivision; bifurcation, such as that of a stem of a plant or a vein of the body into two parts as it proceeds from its origin; often successive. countable,uncountable
    — 1969, J. F. Rigby, Permian Sphenopsids from Antarctica, Geological Survey Professional Paper 613-F, page F-9, In one forked leaf there is a distinct vein dichotomy, and the leaf boundary commences 1.5 mm above the dichotomy.

词形变化

dichotomies plural

词源

From Ancient Greek διχοτομία (dikhotomía, “dichotomy”).
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