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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Triadic

Triadic \Tri*ad"ic\, a. (Chem.) Having the characteristics of a triad; as, boron is triadic.

Wiktionary
triadic

a. 1 of or relating to a triad 2 (context obsolete English) trivalent 3 (context translation studies English) describing interpreting that involves three parties, i.e., the two clients and the interpreter

Wikipedia
Triadic

Triadic may refer to:

  • Triadic patent, a series of corresponding patents
  • Triadic reciprocal causation, a concept in social psychology
  • Triadic relation, a mathematical concept
  • p-adic number, where p=3, a mathematical concept
  • Triad (music)

Usage examples of "triadic".

Their injuries made the triadic roles obvious as they were never meant to be.

Like Graefel, who had stored vast tracts of knowledge in his mind in the days when all triadic scribings dissipated in castings, he had done most of his work in his head.

Enneads had trained their successors in all three triadic disciplines, so he did not require a wordsmith to translate for him or scribe a reply.

This thought gave me pause, or at least a lash of sentimental static that was not quite elaborated into a thought: the wonder that living oaken tissue could be so patient and obedient to its built-in triadic rhythm, responding to the tiny distortions of its oversized cells.

Nation-Idea can be understood by applying the Hegelian-Fichtean Triadic Law of Thought.

HISTORY of nations in the Western Culture follows a great Triadic development.

The Sharani were triadic by nature and necessity since it required three parents to produce viable offspring: sire, bloodmother, and wombmother.

He had fallen in love with a Sharani and her mate, those triadic women who required three parents to produce viable offspring, father, bloodmother, and wombmother.

Furthermore, the laws of dynamics dictate a high risk of triadic horns becoming wedged into mid-range objects, so that none of the three horns might actually penetrate the body of the opponent.

The triadic relationship of utterer, utterance, and listener subsumes a number of mutual understandings necessary to adequate communication.

The triadic structure thus serves as a useful clue to the structures of meaning in the novel.

That was the big pay-off, the triadic bonus, which came as surely as the energy bounty obtained by adding that last pellet of fissionable material.

His mind lost itself in visions of the simple, yet subtle, triadic permutations of skin pigmentation: white, black, and all the warmly sexual spectrum that lay between.

The smallest were motile, ambling on their stilts like animated bagpipes, navigating around the triadic stumps of their dead relatives.

Then the triadic stay, a thin tough wire, was run between boom and foremast, with two blocks already seized to it.