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English Dictionary: Dual by the DICT Development Group
3 results for Dual
From WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006) [wn]:
dual
adj
  1. consisting of or involving two parts or components usually in pairs; "an egg with a double yolk"; "a double (binary) star"; "double doors"; "dual controls for pilot and copilot"; "duple (or double) time consists of two (or a multiple of two) beats to a measure"
    Synonym(s): double, dual, duple
  2. having more than one decidedly dissimilar aspects or qualities; "a double (or dual) role for an actor"; "the office of a clergyman is twofold; public preaching and private influence"- R.W.Emerson; "every episode has its double and treble meaning"-Frederick Harrison
    Synonym(s): double, dual, twofold, two-fold, treble, threefold, three- fold
  3. a grammatical number category referring to two items or units as opposed to one item (singular) or more than two items (plural); "ancient Greek had the dual form but it has merged with the plural form in modern Greek"
From Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913) [web1913]:
   Dual \Du"al\, a. [L. dualis, fr. duo two. See {Two}.]
      Expressing, or consisting of, the number two; belonging to
      two; as, the dual number of nouns, etc., in Greek.
  
               Here you have one half of our dual truth. --Tyndall.

From The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing (15Feb98) [foldoc]:
   dual
  
      Every field of mathematics has a different
      meaning of dual.   Loosely, where there is some binary symmetry
      of a theory, the image of what you look at normally under this
      symmetry is referred to as the dual of your normal things.
  
      In linear algebra for example, for any {vector space} V, over
      a {field}, F, the vector space of {linear maps} from V to F is
      known as the dual of V.   It can be shown that if V is
      finite-dimensional, V and its dual are {isomorphic} (though no
      isomorphism between them is any more natural than any other).
  
      There is a natural {embedding} of any vector space in the dual
      of its dual:
  
            V -> V'': v -> (V': w -> wv : F)
  
      (x' is normally written as x with a horizontal bar above it).
      I.e. v'' is the linear map, from V' to F, which maps any w to
      the scalar obtained by applying w to v.   In short, this
      double-dual mapping simply exchanges the roles of function and
      argument.
  
      It is conventional, when talking about vectors in V, to refer
      to the members of V' as covectors.
  
      (1997-03-16)
  
  
No guarantee of accuracy or completeness!
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