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单词 multipolar
释义

Definition of multipolar in English:

multipolar

adjective mʌltɪˈpəʊlə
  • 1Having many poles or extremities.

    regions of the gut are innervated with multipolar neurons
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Cleavage is followed by a period of differential cell movement that appears to occur largely by multipolar delamination (sometimes called morula delamination).
    • Finally, instead of the dipolar water model used previously we use an improvement, an SPC-like multipolar model that reproduces water's dipole moment.
    • Sensitivity can be improved by using a multipolar esophageal electrode to record the amplitude of the diaphragmatic electromyogram elicited by phrenic nerve stimulation.
    • Most of their neurons are large multipolar projection neurons.
    • In sub mutations, we observed spindles that were unipolar, multipolar, or frayed with no defined poles.
    • These MN appear to be the consequence of a very high rate of chromosome lagging occurring in multipolar mitoses (preceding the multinucleate state) which are produced when cytokinesis-blocked binucleate cells further divide.
    • For gold and silver particles smaller than 50 nm, the electric dipole moment dominates higher-order optical multipolar moments, and absorption exceeds scattering as a mechanism for optical extinction.
    • Individual cells showed a variety of aberrations, with the common presence of cells with abnormalities of the spindle poles, frequently being multipolar.
    • Mutants have multipolar spindles in male meiosis and irregular mitotic figures in the larval neuroblasts, which is the result of aberrant behavior of the mitotic spindle during embryonic cleavage.
  • 2Polarized in several ways or directions.

    today's multipolar and multicultural world
    Example sentencesExamples
    • If one compares multipolar Europe between 1900 and 1945 with bipolar Europe between 1945 and 1990, it might seem that multipolar systems are especially prone to deadly wars.
    • That's why I favour a multipolar world, in which Europe has its place.
    • Washington is merely one of a number of commercial powers in an increasingly multipolar world economy.
    • But Canada is more than a peaceful microcosm of Europe; it is increasingly a peaceful microsm of the entire world whose many interests and interdependencies are multipolar.
    • India must return to the policy of non-alignment and campaign for a multipolar, multilateral, democratic and peaceful global order.
    • The difficulty is that nationhood and religious identities of ethnic population have created shifting norms within the states and now the world is becoming increasingly multipolar and regional.
    • For several centuries before 1945, European states of roughly equivalent standing dominated global affairs in a multipolar system.
    • The reality is surely that of a world without a counterbalance, physically destabilized and thus dangerous in the absence of a multipolar equilibrium.
    • Led by Chirac and Schröder, the core countries would promote a multipolar world, with Europe as one emerging pole.
    • The world has become far more multipolar than it was prior to 1989, and the means by which other players can enter the competitive field of play have greatly proliferated.
    • Out of nervousness about unipolarity, they might underestimate the dangers of a multipolar system in which nonliberal and nondemocratic powers would come to outweigh Europe.
    • A major focus of the book is its subject's obsession with building a multipolar balance-of-power among the United States, China and the Soviet Union.
    • I prefer to envision a multipolar world, hopefully dominated by democracies built on strong and free republics, well informed by humanitarian ideologies.
    • When you look at the evolution of the world, you see that quite naturally a multipolar world is being created, whether one likes it or not.
    • France's former foreign minister Hubert Vedrine believes ‘a politically unipolar world’ is unacceptable, and therefore France is ‘fighting for a multipolar world’.
    • In the multipolar world that has ensued from the end of the Cold War, submerged tensions between the US and Europe have come out into the open.
    • For almost 350 years the world had been a multipolar one, with six or seven powers in a shifting balance.
    • The move is often portrayed by both as the quest for a multipolar international order to challenge the perceived hegemonic influence of an evolving monopolarity - i.e., US supremacy.
    • At the time, it was assumed that the new world would be multipolar, with the U.S., the European Union, Japan, Russia and a rising China sharing power and balancing one another.
    • A multipolar racial pattern has largely supplanted the old racial system, which was often viewed as a bipolar white-black hierarchy.

Derivatives

  • multipolarity

  • noun
    • On this bottom board, power is widely dispersed, and it makes no sense to speak of unipolarity, multipolarity, or hegemony.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The alternative to unipolarity may not be multipolarity at all.
      • In effect, the region will probably move from its present bipolarity (with the United States and Russia as the poles) to unbalanced multipolarity, which will lead to more intense security competition among the European powers.
      • They look forward to the day when America's position in the world is much reduced and China's relative position much stronger - a condition they refer to as multipolarity.
      • It spawned a debate in the early 1990s about the polarity of the post-cold war system, and whether a return to multipolarity might herald the erosion of the stability generated by the cold war's bipolarity.
  • multipole

  • noun ˈmʌltɪpəʊlˈməltiˌpoʊl
    Physics
    • A system of monopoles with no pole strength or net charge.

      the experiment obtained data for the very high-order multipoles

Rhymes

Angola, barbola, bipolar, bowler, bronchiolar, canola, carambola, circumpolar, coaler, Coca-Cola, cola, comptroller, consoler, controller, Ebola, eidola, extoller, Finola, Gorgonzola, granola, Hispaniola, kola, Lola, lunisolar, mandola, molar, Ndola, patroller, payola, pianola, polar, roller, Savonarola, scagliola, scroller, sola, solar, stroller, tombola, Tortola, troller, Vignola, viola, Zola
 
 

Definition of multipolar in US English:

multipolar

adjective
  • 1Having many poles or extremities.

    regions of the gut are innervated with multipolar neurons
    Example sentencesExamples
    • For gold and silver particles smaller than 50 nm, the electric dipole moment dominates higher-order optical multipolar moments, and absorption exceeds scattering as a mechanism for optical extinction.
    • Individual cells showed a variety of aberrations, with the common presence of cells with abnormalities of the spindle poles, frequently being multipolar.
    • Mutants have multipolar spindles in male meiosis and irregular mitotic figures in the larval neuroblasts, which is the result of aberrant behavior of the mitotic spindle during embryonic cleavage.
    • Most of their neurons are large multipolar projection neurons.
    • Cleavage is followed by a period of differential cell movement that appears to occur largely by multipolar delamination (sometimes called morula delamination).
    • Sensitivity can be improved by using a multipolar esophageal electrode to record the amplitude of the diaphragmatic electromyogram elicited by phrenic nerve stimulation.
    • In sub mutations, we observed spindles that were unipolar, multipolar, or frayed with no defined poles.
    • Finally, instead of the dipolar water model used previously we use an improvement, an SPC-like multipolar model that reproduces water's dipole moment.
    • These MN appear to be the consequence of a very high rate of chromosome lagging occurring in multipolar mitoses (preceding the multinucleate state) which are produced when cytokinesis-blocked binucleate cells further divide.
  • 2Polarized in several ways or directions.

    today's multipolar and multicultural world
    Example sentencesExamples
    • But Canada is more than a peaceful microcosm of Europe; it is increasingly a peaceful microsm of the entire world whose many interests and interdependencies are multipolar.
    • In the multipolar world that has ensued from the end of the Cold War, submerged tensions between the US and Europe have come out into the open.
    • For almost 350 years the world had been a multipolar one, with six or seven powers in a shifting balance.
    • I prefer to envision a multipolar world, hopefully dominated by democracies built on strong and free republics, well informed by humanitarian ideologies.
    • A major focus of the book is its subject's obsession with building a multipolar balance-of-power among the United States, China and the Soviet Union.
    • At the time, it was assumed that the new world would be multipolar, with the U.S., the European Union, Japan, Russia and a rising China sharing power and balancing one another.
    • The reality is surely that of a world without a counterbalance, physically destabilized and thus dangerous in the absence of a multipolar equilibrium.
    • For several centuries before 1945, European states of roughly equivalent standing dominated global affairs in a multipolar system.
    • If one compares multipolar Europe between 1900 and 1945 with bipolar Europe between 1945 and 1990, it might seem that multipolar systems are especially prone to deadly wars.
    • The move is often portrayed by both as the quest for a multipolar international order to challenge the perceived hegemonic influence of an evolving monopolarity - i.e., US supremacy.
    • A multipolar racial pattern has largely supplanted the old racial system, which was often viewed as a bipolar white-black hierarchy.
    • Washington is merely one of a number of commercial powers in an increasingly multipolar world economy.
    • Out of nervousness about unipolarity, they might underestimate the dangers of a multipolar system in which nonliberal and nondemocratic powers would come to outweigh Europe.
    • The difficulty is that nationhood and religious identities of ethnic population have created shifting norms within the states and now the world is becoming increasingly multipolar and regional.
    • France's former foreign minister Hubert Vedrine believes ‘a politically unipolar world’ is unacceptable, and therefore France is ‘fighting for a multipolar world’.
    • When you look at the evolution of the world, you see that quite naturally a multipolar world is being created, whether one likes it or not.
    • The world has become far more multipolar than it was prior to 1989, and the means by which other players can enter the competitive field of play have greatly proliferated.
    • India must return to the policy of non-alignment and campaign for a multipolar, multilateral, democratic and peaceful global order.
    • Led by Chirac and Schröder, the core countries would promote a multipolar world, with Europe as one emerging pole.
    • That's why I favour a multipolar world, in which Europe has its place.
 
 
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