multidimensional
English
Etymology
From multi- + dimensional.
Adjective
multidimensional (not comparable)
- Having multiple dimensions (aspects).
- 1996, Raya Dunayevskaya, Women's Liberation and the Dialectics of Revolution →ISBN, page 230:
- Rosa's whole life as a revolutionary, as a theoretician, as a multidimensional woman, was so preoccupied with the spontaneity of revolution […]
- (mathematics) Having more than two dimensions.
- 1996, Raya Dunayevskaya, Women's Liberation and the Dialectics of Revolution →ISBN, page 230:
- Crossing through or existing in multiple dimensions (spacial planes).
- 1998, Judith Bennett, Sex Signs →ISBN, page 336:
- The Cosmic Woman is an integrated, multidimensional woman who has crossed both the Zodiacal and cosmic planes.
- 1998, Judith Bennett, Sex Signs →ISBN, page 336:
Synonyms
Translations
having more than two dimensions
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Noun
multidimensional (plural multidimensionals)
- (science fiction, New Age religion) a being that exists in more than one dimension
Galician
Etymology
From multi- + dimensional.
Adjective
multidimensional m or f (plural multidimensionais)
- multidimensional, pluridimensional
- Synonym: pluridimensional
Portuguese
Etymology
From multi- + dimensional.
Adjective
multidimensional m or f (plural multidimensionais, comparable)
- multidimensional, pluridimensional
- Synonym: pluridimensional
Spanish
Etymology
From multi- + dimensional.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /multidimensjoˈnal/, [mul̪t̪iðimẽnsjoˈnal]
Adjective
multidimensional (plural multidimensionales)
- multidimensional, pluridimensional
- Synonym: pluridimensional
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