dimension

[ US /dɪˈmɛnʃən/ ]
[ UK /da‍ɪmˈɛnʃən/ ]
VERB
  1. shape or form to required dimensions
  2. indicate the dimensions on
    These techniques permit us to dimension the human heart
NOUN
  1. the magnitude of something in a particular direction (especially length or width or height)
  2. magnitude or extent
    a building of vast proportions
  3. a construct whereby objects or individuals can be distinguished
    self-confidence is not an endearing property
  4. one of three Cartesian coordinates that determine a position in space
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How To Use dimension In A Sentence

  • We're currently shrinking the size of technology by a factor of 5.6 per linear dimension per decade, so it is conservative to say that this scenario will be feasible in a few decades.
  • Depending on the size of your pippy bag, the proportions will be all wrong, and it will look a bit like a three-dimensional stick person with a huge bloated hydrocephalic head, but don't worry about that. Hooting Yard
  • During the Classical Greek period from about 480 to 300 B.C. most necklaces were three dimensional pendants.
  • There is another dimension to this problem which you haven't considered.
  • For example, paper might appear to be two-dimensional because it is so thin.
  • So, the system of existential graphs actually requires three dimensions for its representations, although the third dimension in which the torus is embedded can usually be represented in two dimensions by the use of pictorial devices that Peirce called “fornices” or “tunnel-bridges” and by the use of identificational devices that Peirce called Nobody Knows Nothing
  • Thereby, one-dimensional or multidimensional attribute of call events is displayed simultaneously through the invention.
  • Cereal song earth: Fictitious tellurion software, be together satellitic picture, map, encyclopedia and flight simulator conformity, decorate in an earth on three-dimensional model.
  • A second preoccupation evident in these papers is responsibility, and what could roughly be described as the ethical dimension of conceptualisation.
  • Until that point, you must simply bear the horrible dialogue and two-dimensional characters.
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