| 单词 | triad | 
| 释义 | triadn. 1.   a.  A group or set of three (persons, things, words, attributes, etc.); three collectively or in connection. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > number > specific numbers > three > group of three > 			[noun]		 leashc1330 ternarya1464 trinity1542 three?1544 triad1546 trine1554 triplicity1585 ternion1587 pair royal1592 trinary1596 trias1610 gleek1615 triangle1621 triple1653 triumvirate1655 prial1776 trio1777 trefoil1826 trinomy1838 Pip, Squeak, and Wilfred1937 1546    in  State Papers Henry VIII 		(1852)	 XI. 341  				Two thynges I noted in thEmperour, diligent herynge of me, and good wordys; yf deadis shal nowe folowe accordingely, the triade shall be perfecte. 1614    T. Adams Diuells Banket i. 28  				Sometimes they daunce in Triades, by threes. a1774    A. Tucker Light of Nature 		(1834)	 II. 228  				Descend, celestial Graces, sacred Triad. 1858    C. Merivale Hist. Romans under Empire VI. liii. 132  				The triad of matricides, Nero, Orestes, Alcmœon. 1898    J. T. Fowler Durham Cathedral 49  				Three triads of Lancet windows.  b.  The number three (in Pythagorean philosophy). ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > number > specific numbers > three > 			[noun]		 threec1175 trias1610 triad1660 1660    T. Stanley Hist. Philos. III.  i. 59  				The Triad is the first number actually odd, and the first perfect number, and middle, and proportion. 1875    B. Jowett tr.  Plato Dialogues 		(ed. 2)	 I. 485  				The triad or number three is uneven.  2.  Specific uses.  a.  Applied to the Trinity. 				 [representing Greek τριάς trinity, used by Theophilus of Antioch and Clement of Alexandria, a200.]			 ΘΚΠ the world > the supernatural > deity > Christian God > the Trinity > 			[noun]		 trinitya1250 trinehood1471 trinea1568 ternary1570 triunity1621 triad1661 tritheocracy1850 1661    G. Rust Let. conc. Origen 19  				There is nothing in that blessed Triad he describes which can be called Creature. 1721    N. Bailey Universal Etymol. Eng. Dict.  				Triad..the Trinity. 1806    T. Maurice Fall of Mogul  i. ii  				Divine, ineffable, eternal triad! 1909    H. B. Swete Holy Spirit in New Test.  ii. i. 124  				[What] He [Jesus] had taught concerning these Three Persons by presenting Them as at once a Triad and a Unity.  b.  A group of three associated or correlated deities, beings, or powers. ΘΚΠ the world > the supernatural > deity > 			[noun]		 > group of three Capitoline Trinity1678 triada1746 Capitoline Triad1853 a1746    E. Holdsworth Remarks & Diss. Virgil 		(1768)	 83  				Virgil..means the great Triad of deities first received all over the East. 1813    J. C. Prichard Res. Physical Hist. Man vii. §6. 394  				We see the attributes of the three persons of the Triad, united in one figure, which represents the supreme Deity, holding conjoined the characters of Creator, Preserver, and Destroyer. 1907    J. R. Illingworth Doctr. Trinity vii. 130  				The many artificially arranged triads,..like that of Brahma, Siva, and Vishnu in India.  c.  In Welsh literature: A form of composition characterized by an arrangement of subjects or statements in groups of three. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > literature > poetry > poem or piece of poetry > types of poem according to form > 			[noun]		 > triad (Welsh) trilogue1834 triad1839 1611    J. Speed Hist. Great Brit.  vi. liv. 280/2  				The Booke Triades mentioned by the Author of the Reformed History of Great Britaine. 1809    W. Blake in  Compl. Writings 		(1972)	 560  				Three Ancient Britons overthrowing the Army of armed Romans..From the Welch Triades.]			 1839    C. Guest in  tr.  Mabinogion 		(1849)	  ii. 381  				In the Triads, mention is made of the Addanc, or Avanc of the Lake, as an aquatic monster. 1855    C. M. Yonge Cameos xxxv, in  Monthly Packet Nov. 323  				Instructions were still oral, and for convenience of memory were drawn up in triads, or verses of three. 1868    W. F. Skene Four Anc. Bks. Wales I. 28  				As early as the date of the Black Book of Caermarthen some of the Welsh traditions appear under the form of short triads, and that MS. contains a fragment of what were probably the earliest—the Triads of the Horses.  d.  Music. A chord of three notes, consisting of a given note with the third and fifth above it; e.g. a common chord (without the octave).The third may be major or minor, the fifth perfect, augmented, or diminished; hence the triad is described by these adjectives accordingly. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > music > musical sound > harmony or sounds in combination > chord > 			[noun]		 > other chords seventh1591 fourth1597 sixth1597 fifth1631 tierce1696 septime1725 repercussion1728 octave1749 substitution1784 triad1786 German sixth1812 French sixth1813 nintha1830 Neapolitan sixth1871 six-four1873 Italian sixth1875 tetrad1881 added sixth1888 leading seventh1889 ninth chord1889 under-chord1890 diminished seventh1926 society > leisure > the arts > music > musical sound > harmony or sounds in combination > chord > 			[noun]		 > common chord common chord1864 triad1881 1786    T. Busby Compl. Dict. Music  				Triad, the common chord, or harmony consisting of the third, fifth, and eighth. 1881    J. Broadhouse Student's Helmholtz xv. 320  				There are within the octave only three triads or chords of three notes which are consonant. 1889    E. Prout Harmony viii. §181  				A chord..containing a major third and an augmented fifth..is called an augmented triad.  e.  Chemistry. A trivalent element or radical, i.e. one which combines with three atoms of hydrogen or other monovalent element or radical. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > chemistry > valency > 			[noun]		 > combining powers of elements > element with the power of three triad1865 1865    Reader 1 Apr. 372/2  				The family of triatomic atoms or triads, consisting of nitrogen and its analogues, gold and boron. 1865–8    H. Watts Dict. Chem. III. 964  				There are four triad metals properly so called, namely, aluminium, thallium, indium, and gold. 1868    H. B. Jones  & H. Watts Fownes's Man. Elem. Chem. 		(ed. 10)	 252  				Each element is connected with others by a number of lines, or connecting bonds, corresponding to its degree of equivalence; a monad being connected..by only one such bond, a triad by three.  f.  Biology		 (a) A group of three cells, e.g. spores.		 (b) A tertiary unit of organization consisting of an aggregate of dyads: cf. dyad n. 2b. Also attributive, as  triad-deme: see deme n.2 2. ΘΚΠ the world > life > biology > substance > cell > 			[noun]		 > mass or group of polyblast1873 tetrad1876 triad1876 tetrad-deme1883 stem-line1892 paraganglion1907 polyclone1975 the world > life > biology > balance of nature > organisms in interrelationship > 			[noun]		 > aggregate or colony colony1808 triad1876 pseudoplasmodium1892 1876    tr.  P. Schützenberger On Fermentation 52  				The two spores connected together have only one plane surface, the triads have two. 1883    P. Geddes in  Encycl. Brit. XVI. 843/2  				Starting from the unit of the first order, the plastid or monad, and terming any undifferentiated aggregate a deme, we have a monad-deme integrating into a secondary unit or dyad, this rising through dyad-demes into a triad, these forming triad-demes, etc.  g.  Prosody. A group of three lines having different rhythms. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > literature > poetry > part of poem > 			[noun]		 > stanza > three lines with internal or external rhymes > three lines with different rhythms triad1885 1885    B. L. Gildersleeve Pindar p. liii  				Dyads and triads there are in Pindar, but they do not disturb the rhythmical working of the odes.  h.  Mathematics		 (a) A set of three things, esp. in Geometry of three points.		 (b) In Quaternions, An indeterminate product of three vectors. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > number > geometry > point > 			[noun]		 > sets or groups of points umbilic point1586 involution1847 triad1850 range1859 point group1887 tetrad1889 tristigm1889 neighbourhood1891 trinode1891 trigraphy1895 Cantor set1902 web1909 limit cycle1918 Leech lattice1968 the world > relative properties > number > mathematical number or quantity > tensor > 			[noun]		 > vector > vector product curl1873 outer multiplication1881 outer product1884 triad1885 rotation1908 1850    A. Cayley Coll. Math. Papers I. 481  				Forming with seven letters..a system of seven triads containing every possible duad. 1885    C. Leudesdorf tr.  L. Cremona Elements Projective Geom. 37  				If the triad ABC be projected from S upon s1 (giving A1B1C1), and the triad A′B′C′ be projected from S upon s2 (giving A2B2C2); then the triads A1B1C1 and A2B2C2 will be in perspective.  i.  Crystallography.  triad axis, an axis of trigonal symmetry. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > chemistry > crystallography (general) > crystal (general) > crystal symmetry > 			[noun]		 > axis of symmetry > types of screw axis1843 twin-axis1855 triad axis1909 1909    in  Cent. Dict. Suppl.  				  j.  Pathology. A group of three symptoms or signs. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > ill health > a disease > symptom > 			[noun]		 > set of symptoms syndrome?1541 symptomatology1798 symptomology1868 symptom-complex1897 symptom-group1897 triad1899 tetralogy1927 1899    E. Lang in  T. L. Stedman 20th Cent. Pract. XVIII. 267  				Since the work of Hutchinson, who looked upon a keratitis parenchymatosa in conjunction with a frequently observed deafness and anomaly of the incisors as an expression of hereditary syphilis (Hutchinson's triad), affections of the cornea are numbered among the most frequently occurring manifestations of syphilis. 1908    E. L. Keyes Syphilis xxxvi. 533  				Hutchinson's triad, consisting of dental, ocular, and auditory stigmata. 1909    G. Dock in  Osler  & McCrae Syst. Med. VI. xvii. 439  				The early idea that the disease [sc. exophthalmic goitre] was characterized by a ‘triad’ of symptoms gives way slowly. 1948    Official Gaz. 		(U.S. Patent Office)	 24 Feb. 607/1  				Tridione... For anticonvulsant intended for use in treatment of the petit mal triad and other convulsive disorders. 1954    D. Nabarro Congenital Syphilis ii. 14  				He pointed out that interstitial keratitis and notched incisor teeth were frequently associated with 8th nerve deafness—the three signs being known as the Hutchinsonian triad. 1982    Sci. Amer. Aug. 82/2  				The classic triad of the inflammatory reaction is redness, warmth and swelling.  3.   Triad Society. 				 [translating Chinese San Ho Hui, lit. ‘three unite society’, i.e. ‘triple union society’, according to Giles meaning ‘the union of Heaven, Earth, and Man’.]			 A secret Chinese society, formed in the reign of Yung Chêng, 1723–36, with the alleged purpose of ousting the Manchu dynasty; later having a large membership in Southern China and various foreign countries. Hence  Triads = members of the Triad Society; also, secret societies, frequently of a criminal character, into which the Triad Society has become divided, and which flourish among overseas Chinese. Also in singular. Frequently attributive. ΘΚΠ society > society and the community > social relations > an association, society, or organization > secret society > 			[noun]		 > Chinese secret societies Triad Society1821 hoey1865 tong1883 Triads1960 1821    W. Milne Acc. Triad Society in  Trans. Royal Asiatic Soc. 		(1827)	 I. 240  				The name..seems..to be the San hŏ hwuy, i.e. ‘The Society of the Three united, or the Triad Society’. 1836    J. F. Davis Chinese II. xi. 15  				The San-hŏ-hoey, or Triad Society... The name seems to imply that when Heaven, Earth, and Man combine to favour them, they shall succeed in subverting the present Tartar dynasty. 1848    S. W. Williams Middle Kingdom I. viii. 395  				The English government of Hongkong, enacted in 1845, that any Chinese living in that colony who was ascertained to belong to the Triad Society, should be declared guilty of felony, be imprisoned for three years, and after branding expelled the colony. 1900    Daily News 13 Nov. 9/3  				The programme of the Triads. 1907    Daily Chron. 28 May 1/7  				A rebellion has broken out in Kwantung. About 30,000 persons, headed by the Triad Secret Society, have risen. 1960    D. Whitehead Journey into Crime 		(1961)	 27  				Triad gangs poured into the streets..and fought the police. 1962    M. Gordon  & G. Gordon Journey with Stranger 		(1963)	 xxiv. 139  				The Triads, those secret criminal societies that sought to monopolize every kind of racket. 1975    D. Bloodworth Clients of Omega vii. 64  				A rival society buried your body, it seems. The 18-K Triad. 1976    Spectator 14 Feb. 3/2  				Chinese Triad gangs made their mark in London by kicking to death a man in a Soho gambling club. 1976    Daily Colonist 		(Victoria, Brit. Columbia)	 2 Mar. 3/1  				A heroin smuggling racket that may be linked with the world-wide Chinese secret society known as Triad. 1977    Hongkong Standard 14 Apr. 5/1  				As far as triad influence in these committees was concerned, Mr Lam admitted his department had received complaints in the past. 1978    Daily Tel. 3 Apr. 3/3  				Yard chiefs concerned about the increasing violence between rival triads..have ordered a further big crackdown. Draft additions 1993 k.  Anatomy. A structure found in the striated skeletal muscle of most vertebrates, which consists of a transverse tubule of the T-system in contact with two terminal cisternae of the sarcoplasmic reticulum. ΘΚΠ the world > life > the body > structural parts > muscle > parts of muscle > 			[noun]		 wella1400 fontanelle?a1425 head?a1425 belly1591 venter1615 tail1719 myotome1857 sclerotome1857 myomere1868 muscle spindle1894 spindle1894 Z line1916 Z band1950 dyad1957 triad1957 1957    Porter  & Palade in  Jrnl. Biophysical & Biochem. Cytol. III. 275  				The two [I-band] vesicles with the intervening space and its contents constitute a three-component structure which is being referred to as a triad. 1964    Jrnl. Cell Biol. 22 694/1  				In cardiac muscle and in certain insect muscles the homologue of the triad is to be found in a dyad. 1969    Jrnl. Physiol. 205 134  				Areas of contact between the T-system and sarcoplasmic reticulum are present in the familiar triad structure. 1987    Nature 10 Dec. 565/2  				Dysgenic skeletal muscle cells acquire Ca2+ channel activity, triads, and contractile capacity after co-culture with normal spinal cord neurons. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1914; most recently modified version published online March 2022). <  | 
	
| 随便看 | 
英语词典包含1132095条英英释义在线翻译词条,基本涵盖了全部常用单词的英英翻译及用法,是英语学习的有利工具。