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[ US /ˈdaɪˌæd/ ]
[ UK /dˈa‍ɪæd/ ]
NOUN
  1. two items of the same kind

How To Use dyad In A Sentence

  • The hospital stay of the mother-infant dyad should be long enough to allow identification of early problems and to ensure that the family is able and prepared to care for the infant at home.
  • The rake/victim dyad is organized around the cultural power that men have and women do not. Notes, "'Mummy, possest': Sadism and Sensibility in Shelley's _Frankenstein_"
  • However, those aggressive children who do evaluate their friendship quality more positively than their friend may eventually experience problems also in their dyadic friendships.
  • Traditionally, studies of animal communication have considered a receiver - signaler dyad.
  • While Luby does not dismiss the idea of a pharmacological treatment in the future, Luby's lab is currently testing a unique early intervention called dyadic play therapy.
  • It follows, therefore, that the amount of support a child receives within this same-sex dyad would be a major determinant of psychosocial development and health over an individual's life course.
  • A lack of awareness of this, and of the importance of protecting the mother-child dyad, can further contribute to a new father's role confusion.
  • They seem to embody a kind of masculine/feminine dyad, and their colour scheme draws attention to this even further.
  • Often Bronte's most powerful scenes are dyadic: two pictures appear in the mind, bang, bang, two acts of imagistic assertion, with the second simply erasing or subtracting the first. Archive 2010-02-07
  • Many of these establishments “catered to a particular black-white dyad, whether black men seeking white prostitutes or white men seeking black.” A Renegade History of the United States
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