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ADJECTIVE
  1. involving two parts or elements
    a two-way treaty
    a bipartite document
    a two-way treaty
  2. divided into two portions almost to the base

How To Use bipartite In A Sentence

  • König's work on the factorisation of bipartite graphs relates closely to the marriage problem of Philip Hall.
  • What however the agreement failed to reflect was that the partnership was tripartite and that Mr. Kemp's earlier efforts had been bipartite.
  • In the case of cashcards, which involve bipartite agreements, and of electronic purses which are treated like cash, the last problem is inapplicable.
  • When our early medieval documents begin again in the eighth century, however, bipartite divisions are commonly referred to.
  • At each mating, the female receives a bipartite spermatophore consisting of a spermatophylax and a sperm-containing ampulla.
  • To be sure, even an undiscriminating bipartite mechanism may produce a belief that, luckily, is true; but there will be other, counterfactual, situations in which such a belief would be false.
  • With the new law, both employers and workers will be allowed to go to government mediators, conciliators or arbitrators within 30 days if they fail to resolve a dispute at the bipartite level.
  • But an ‘Ivy League’ plus the rest sounds uncomfortably like the old bipartite system of grammar and secondary moderns, and it would need careful handling to avoid creating a political backlash.
  • A red-blue matching is the geometric analogue of bipartite matching in graphs; match up red and blue vertices in pairs to minimize the total cost (= sum of distances).
  • It becomes clear fairly quickly once you start playing with examples that the thing to do is create some kind of bipartite graph, where the left side is the ‘bad answer’ and the right side is the ‘good answer’.
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