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dichotomize

VERB
  1. divide into two opposing groups or kinds

How To Use dichotomize In A Sentence

  • Age was dichotomized to distinguish between preadolescents and adolescents.
  • It retains the practice of deploying material in spatial patterns to expedite recall, but eliminates all iconography, sub - stituting for statues of Athena, Zeus, and the like mere printed words connected to one another by lines in an extremely simple binary pattern forming the dichotomized Ramist charts of “methodized” noetic material. RAMISM
  • Most disconcertingly, many of their public statements are Bush 43 redux, a smorgasbord of overly-optimistic platitudes utterly dichotomized from economic realities. Sheldon Filger: Obama's Economic Crisis Team is Full of Green Shoots
  • Scores were dichotomized so that any numbered response to an item represented a ‘yes’ and any zero response to an item represented a ‘no.’
  • Contemporary attitudes and beliefs are dichotomized between emphasis on amenity/newcomer and commodity/long-time resident values, but all overlain by a rural lifestyle, even in the trendy Marin headlands north of San Francisco. Northern California Coast (Bailey)
  • This variable was dichotomized to represent inconsistent condom use (condom not used every time, coded 1) versus consistent condom use (condom used every time, coded 0).
  • (vita/mors) — and another disciple, Theodor Zwinger the Elder (1533-88), in his Methodus apodemica (1577) produces a dichotomized logical analysis of the RAMISM
  • As the female protégé of a misogynistic rapper, the female version of Lil Wayne, Nicki Minaj undoubtedly conforms to certain dichotomized gendered norms. PART 2/3: LL Cool J’s “Around the Way Girl” « Gender Across Borders
  • Judgment or arrangement was likewise dichotomized into axiomatic judgment (enunciations) and dianoetic judgment (reasoning processes). RAMISM
  • There was in man, or there belonged to man (1) a visible body, which {xiii} was again dichotomized, and believed to be composed, according to many of the Gnostics, of a subtle element like that of which they supposed Adam in his unfallen state was made, which they named the _hylic_ body, and Spiritual Reformers in the 16th & 17th Centuries
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