[
US
/ˌtudɪˈmɛnʃənəɫ/
]
ADJECTIVE
- involving or having two dimensions
-
lacking the expected range or depth; not designed to give an illusion or depth
a film with two-dimensional characters
a flat two-dimensional painting
How To Use two-dimensional In A Sentence
- As with many quotes there's a good deal of truth in it and, as with many aphorisms, that truth becomes more and more shallow and two-dimensional as it is examined.
- For example, paper might appear to be two-dimensional because it is so thin.
- Until that point, you must simply bear the horrible dialogue and two-dimensional characters.
- The cooperative transport in a two-dimensional system of hard balls is studied, which is underdamped and under the deterministically flashing ratchet potential.
- Different three-dimensional objects, oriented appropriately, have the same two-dimensional plane projection.
- When people think of two-dimensional art, they usually think of work done in oil, watercolor, pastel or charcoal.
- I heard someone criticize them once for never using two-dimensional characters.
- The kinetoscope with its two-dimensional strip and its shutter does the same thing more steadily, and presents the illusion of motion in a two-dimensional area even better than the little hand mutoscope. The Fourth Dimension Simply Explained
- The playfield is the two-dimensional silhouette cast by the world's physical objects. Thestar.com - Home Page
- Unfortunately, this manipulation results in their coming off as the most two-dimensional characters.