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词汇 two-dimensional
释义

Definition of two-dimensional in English:

two-dimensional

adjective ˌtuːdʌɪˈmɛnʃ(ə)n(ə)lˌtudəˈmɛn(t)ʃ(ə)n(ə)l
  • 1Having or appearing to have length and breadth but no depth.

    二维的,平面的

    a two-dimensional object
    Example sentencesExamples
    • We all think of a line segment as being one-dimensional, a square two-dimensional and a cube three-dimensional, but what does this really mean?
    • The computer collects signals from different depths and combines them to make a two-dimensional image of the skin.
    • Because the net is two-dimensional, it can easily be visualized.
    • The same two-dimensional model could consistently describe the data from both men and women.
    • The envelope expresses texture and depth not through carving, but through two-dimensional patterns on the skin.
    • The second space included ceramic and two-dimensional work made while he taught in Alfred, N.Y.
    • Assuming aggregation happens on the cell surface, we choose a two-dimensional hexagonal lattice.
    • When asked to identify a cube illustrated on a two-dimensional computer screen, for example, Mr. May failed.
    • A shape is a flat, two-dimensional area having only length and width.
    • In principle there are infinitely many three-dimensional forms that could correspond to a given two-dimensional perspective picture.
    • The painting was cartoon-like, very flat and two-dimensional, exuding comic flair and hilarity.
    • Eight glossily painted, two-dimensional wooden horses hinged to one another stretched across the room.
    • Byzantine art is often criticized as flat, two-dimensional, hieratic, and unchanging.
    • The influence of two-dimensional Japanese art is clearly visible.
    • The simulations have evolved from two-dimensional models and solutions to three-dimensional ones.
    • Since they were interested in the entire stem they applied a two-dimensional cylindrical symmetrical model.
    • After looking at two-dimensional patterns made up of red and white squares and triangles, you have to reproduce these patterns using cubes with red and white faces.
    • When people think of two-dimensional art, they usually think of work done in oil, watercolor, pastel or charcoal.
    • For example, paper might appear to be two-dimensional because it is so thin.
    • It offers a more useful visualization device than the traditional two-dimensional diagrams of inputs and outputs.
    1. 1.1 Lacking depth or substance; superficial.
      肤浅的;没有深度的
      a nether world of two-dimensional heroes and villains

      一个拥有肤浅英雄与恶棍的下层社会。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • Fortunately, the film does offer some stylish action scenes which almost make up for its two-dimensional characters.
      • With the exception of Halifax, the rest of the characters are two-dimensional.
      • Jan and Anna remain relatively two-dimensional characters because this novel is an absorbed study of the masculine mind.
      • You took a fairly two-dimensional character and made her believable, even sympathetic at times.
      • And whether it's inherent, or the way they're directed, but they just seem two-dimensional cyphers of characters.
      • They are largely two-dimensional, lacking psychological definition.
      • I turned off after forty five minutes, bored by the two-dimensional characters and stilted dialogue.
      • On paper Bobby seemed like a real monster, really two-dimensional.
      • It's very frustrating, because I get emotional invested in those two-dimensional characters.
      • Unfortunately, this manipulation results in their coming off as the most two-dimensional characters.
      • The dialogue may be risible and the characters two-dimensional and shallow but, for a while at least, it doesn't matter.
      • Too many films allow the villain to remain two-dimensional; not so here.
      • Despite a sense of grim inevitability hanging over her, she brings conviction and depth to a role that could easily have been two-dimensional.
      • They certainly weren't shallow two-dimensional characters.
      • Until that point, you must simply bear the horrible dialogue and two-dimensional characters.
      • His deliberately two-dimensional characters are hilariously drawn to provide some much needed light relief to such an obviously calamitous tale.
      • I heard someone criticize them once for never using two-dimensional characters.
      • He is merely trying - not very convincingly - to reproduce the two-dimensional character created by the media.
      • He is the phantom actor behind the self-consciously performative tics of his otherwise two-dimensional characters.
      • Okay, a couple of the characters were two-dimensional, but I can forgive that in an animated feature.
      Synonyms
      lacklustre, spiritless, lacking vitality, apathetic, torpid, lethargic

Derivatives

  • two-dimensionality

  • noun
    • They hit the ball so much harder and better than you can imagine - or than television's flat two-dimensionality can convey - that you will never again make the mistake of dismissing golf as ‘not a sport.’
      Example sentencesExamples
      • He painted naturalistic works with elements of Cézanne's dashed surfaces, before adopting an expressive two-dimensionality before the First World War.
      • The two-dimensionality of ‘manga’ often results in an overall patterning and flattening of colors and shapes, which, according to Murakami, ‘provides a parallel space in which to escape from the pressures of society.’
      • But the power of his performance only underlines the two-dimensionality of the part as it lies in the text.
      • In fact, the narrow strips that he placed next to each other were parallel and undeviating in their two-dimensionality.
  • two-dimensionally

  • adverb
    • She is figured two-dimensionally as the damsel in distress awaiting her hero's courageous rescue.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • But there is no denying that there is a certain charm to going back to the flat worlds of old and once again think two-dimensionally.
      • Younger artists looked for ways of either avoiding painting or, if operating two-dimensionally, of subverting it.
      • When designing their gardens, most amateur landscapers direct their focus down, thinking two-dimensionally (width and depth) without taking into consideration that most plants grow - up!
      • Part painting, part relief, the 14 tile works, of varying dimensions, were a departure for an artist who is best known as a sculptor, although she has also worked two-dimensionally in recent years.

Rhymes

ascensional, attentional, conventional, declensional, intentional, tensional, three-dimensional

Definition of two-dimensional in US English:

two-dimensional

adjectiveˌtudəˈmɛn(t)ʃ(ə)n(ə)lˌto͞odəˈmen(t)SH(ə)n(ə)l
  • 1Having or appearing to have length and breadth but no depth.

    二维的,平面的

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The same two-dimensional model could consistently describe the data from both men and women.
    • The simulations have evolved from two-dimensional models and solutions to three-dimensional ones.
    • We all think of a line segment as being one-dimensional, a square two-dimensional and a cube three-dimensional, but what does this really mean?
    • A shape is a flat, two-dimensional area having only length and width.
    • The painting was cartoon-like, very flat and two-dimensional, exuding comic flair and hilarity.
    • The computer collects signals from different depths and combines them to make a two-dimensional image of the skin.
    • In principle there are infinitely many three-dimensional forms that could correspond to a given two-dimensional perspective picture.
    • The envelope expresses texture and depth not through carving, but through two-dimensional patterns on the skin.
    • When people think of two-dimensional art, they usually think of work done in oil, watercolor, pastel or charcoal.
    • The second space included ceramic and two-dimensional work made while he taught in Alfred, N.Y.
    • It offers a more useful visualization device than the traditional two-dimensional diagrams of inputs and outputs.
    • For example, paper might appear to be two-dimensional because it is so thin.
    • Eight glossily painted, two-dimensional wooden horses hinged to one another stretched across the room.
    • Byzantine art is often criticized as flat, two-dimensional, hieratic, and unchanging.
    • After looking at two-dimensional patterns made up of red and white squares and triangles, you have to reproduce these patterns using cubes with red and white faces.
    • Since they were interested in the entire stem they applied a two-dimensional cylindrical symmetrical model.
    • The influence of two-dimensional Japanese art is clearly visible.
    • Assuming aggregation happens on the cell surface, we choose a two-dimensional hexagonal lattice.
    • When asked to identify a cube illustrated on a two-dimensional computer screen, for example, Mr. May failed.
    • Because the net is two-dimensional, it can easily be visualized.
    1. 1.1 Lacking depth or substance; superficial.
      肤浅的;没有深度的
      a nether world of two-dimensional heroes and villains

      一个拥有肤浅英雄与恶棍的下层社会。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • Jan and Anna remain relatively two-dimensional characters because this novel is an absorbed study of the masculine mind.
      • He is merely trying - not very convincingly - to reproduce the two-dimensional character created by the media.
      • You took a fairly two-dimensional character and made her believable, even sympathetic at times.
      • Unfortunately, this manipulation results in their coming off as the most two-dimensional characters.
      • Okay, a couple of the characters were two-dimensional, but I can forgive that in an animated feature.
      • And whether it's inherent, or the way they're directed, but they just seem two-dimensional cyphers of characters.
      • He is the phantom actor behind the self-consciously performative tics of his otherwise two-dimensional characters.
      • They certainly weren't shallow two-dimensional characters.
      • His deliberately two-dimensional characters are hilariously drawn to provide some much needed light relief to such an obviously calamitous tale.
      • Despite a sense of grim inevitability hanging over her, she brings conviction and depth to a role that could easily have been two-dimensional.
      • Too many films allow the villain to remain two-dimensional; not so here.
      • On paper Bobby seemed like a real monster, really two-dimensional.
      • I heard someone criticize them once for never using two-dimensional characters.
      • I turned off after forty five minutes, bored by the two-dimensional characters and stilted dialogue.
      • Until that point, you must simply bear the horrible dialogue and two-dimensional characters.
      • Fortunately, the film does offer some stylish action scenes which almost make up for its two-dimensional characters.
      • It's very frustrating, because I get emotional invested in those two-dimensional characters.
      • They are largely two-dimensional, lacking psychological definition.
      • With the exception of Halifax, the rest of the characters are two-dimensional.
      • The dialogue may be risible and the characters two-dimensional and shallow but, for a while at least, it doesn't matter.
      Synonyms
      lacklustre, spiritless, lacking vitality, apathetic, torpid, lethargic
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