[
US
/ˌbaɪfɝˈkeɪʃən, ˌbɪfɝˈkeɪʃən/
]
[ UK /baɪfəkˈeɪʃən/ ]
[ UK /baɪfəkˈeɪʃən/ ]
NOUN
- the place where something divides into two branches
- the act of splitting into two branches
- a bifurcating branch (one or both of them)
How To Use bifurcation In A Sentence
- The options suggested in the report included retaining a unified state with constitutional measures for the empowerment of the Telangana region, and the bifurcation of the state with Hyderabad, a center for India's information technology industry, as a federal distr ict. India Leaves Region's Push for Statehood Unresolved
- First alveolar duct bifurcations have been shown to be a primary site of deposition for particulate matter and gaseous pollutants.
- History and textual theory continue to constitute the principal bifurcation in literary studies, and those two methods of inquiry frequently elicit professions of faith rather than reasoned argumentation.
- They give way to secondary branches and multiple bifurcations that reflect the path of dielectric breakdown within the soil-gravel horizon.
- Note that this is not the complete bifurcation diagram, because bifurcations involving unstable or negative equilibria are not included.
- Glomus tumor is a vascular neoplasm arising from the paraganglia around the carotid bifurcation, the jugular bulb, or the tympanic arteries.
- Glomus tumor is a vascular neoplasm arising from the paraganglia around the carotid bifurcation, the jugular bulb, or the tympanic arteries.
- The overall morphology of the colony was not observed, but it is presumed to have been bushy based on the size and shape of the branches and branch bifurcations.
- The circuit parameter was changed, and the way of simulation was adopted to analyze the phenomenon of bifurcation and chaos of the converter.
- Damage is greatest in arterial bifurcations, deviations, and constrictions where turbulence is intense.