[
US
/ˈpoʊɫɝˌaɪz/
]
VERB
- become polarized in a conflict or contrasting situation
- cause to concentrate about two conflicting or contrasting positions
-
cause to vibrate in a definite pattern
polarize light waves
How To Use polarize In A Sentence
- By this time, Dad and I had replaced the old dipole with a short Yagi array, horizontally polarized of course, and screwed to one of the crossbeams in the attic, so now we had three channels with excellent reception.
- The interpretation of scripture was polarized between the selective literalism of Calvinism and the more liberal application found within the teachings of Arminius.
- Increasingly, Labour and Conservative support has become polarized between North and South and between urban and rural areas.
- In the third chapter, using the second-order momentum of beam radius, the Rayleigh range and beam propagation factor of three different polarized beam arrays are derived.
- Why the average individual's world perspective has to be so polarized is intriguing and has actually taught me a lot about humanity. New Photos of Mickey Rourke in Darren Aronofsky's The Wrestler « FirstShowing.net
- The chitinized walls that lined many of the spray flow structures exhibited birefringence in polarized light microscopy.
- The followers we studied that hyperpolarize in response to HA and show increasing membrane conductance are insensitive to NO.
- Although most optical light is unpolarized – consisting of light with an equal mix of all polarizations – the extreme bending of energetic particles around a magnetic field line can polarize light. World-wide Campaign Sheds New Light on Nature's "LHC" | Universe Today
- Once more, the evidence is ambiguous and interpretations have become polarized.
- Scratch resistent glass doesn't distort, amber tint, polarized is the only way to go for fishing. For Better Fly Fishing... Glass or Plastic?