| 释义 | par·i·ty I. \ˈparəd.ē, -ətē, -i also ˈper-\ noun
 (-es)
 Etymology: Latin paritas, from par equal + -itas -ity — more at pair
 1.  : the quality or state of being equal : close equivalence or resemblance : equality of rank, nature, or value : likeness
 < parity must exist between authority and responsibility — Harold Koontz & Cyril O'Donnell >
 2.
 a.  : equivalence of a commodity price expressed in one currency to its price expressed in another
 b.  : equality of purchasing power established by law between different kinds of money at a given ratio (as between gold and silver coins of a fixed weight and fineness)
 3.  : an equivalence between farmers' current purchasing power and their purchasing power at a selected base period maintained by government support of agricultural commodity prices at a level fixed by law : a ratio between agricultural and nonagricultural prices at a specified past time
 < parity is the price calculated to give the farmer a fair return in relation to the things he must buy — New York Times >
 II. noun
 (-es)
 Etymology: parous + -ity
 : parous condition : number of children previously borne
 < the age and parity of the mother may be a factor — Journal American Medical Association >
 III. noun
 1.
 a.  : the property of an integer with respect to being odd or even
 < 3 and 7 have the same parity >
 b.
 (1)  : the state of being odd or even used as the basis of a method of detecting errors in binary-coded data
 (2)  : parity bit herein
 2.  : the property of oddness or evenness of a wave function in quantum mechanics
 3.  : the symmetry of behavior in an interaction of a physical entity (as a subatomic particle) with that of its mirror image
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