parity
1equality, as in amount, status, or character.
equivalence; correspondence; similarity; analogy: She and her brother always seemed like day and night to me, but I'm starting to see a real parity of nature between them.
Finance.
equivalence in value in the currency of another country.
equivalence in value at a fixed ratio between moneys of different metals.
Physics.
a property of a wave function, expressed as +1 or −1 and noting the relation of the given function to the function formed when each variable is replaced by its negative, +1 indicating that the functions are identical and −1 that the second function is the negative of the first.
Also called intrinsic parity . a number +1 or −1 assigned to each kind of elementary particle in such a way that the product of the parities of the particles in a system of particles multiplied by the parity of the wave function describing the system is unchanged when particles are created or annihilated.
a system of regulating prices of farm commodities, usually by government price supports, to provide farmers with the same purchasing power they had in a selected base period.
Computers. the condition of the number of items in a set, particularly the number of bits per byte or word, being either even or odd: used as a means for detecting certain errors.
Origin of parity
1Words Nearby parity
Other definitions for parity (2 of 2)
Origin of parity
2Dictionary.com Unabridged Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2024
How to use parity in a sentence
On one hand, the rising drinking among women is a sign of parity.
Elizabeth Peña and the Truth About Alcoholic Women | Gabrielle Glaser | October 24, 2014 | THE DAILY BEASTIn the last three decades, courts have begun to apply gender parity to the awarding of alimony.
With more women achieving financial parity with men, more women are able to take up luxury hobbies men have long enjoyed.
If you run the numbers a different way and measure purchasing power parity, Russia's economy is larger than Italy's.
Even at the age bracket where men and women appear closest in frequency, there is nothing remotely close to masturbation parity.
C’mon, Ladies, Masturbation Isn’t Just for Bad Girls | Emily Shire | June 19, 2014 | THE DAILY BEAST
The laws prohibiting these do not forbid the lottery, nor can it be included under them by parity of reasoning.
The Age of Erasmus | P. S. AllenGrand serjeanty is of course included by parity under military service.
Freight thus moves freely in every direction and all markets are held on an absolute parity.
Railroads: Rates and Regulations | William Z. RipleyOn every sound principle of rate making, the two cities ought to be placed on a parity.
Railroads: Rates and Regulations | William Z. RipleyIn her eyes he was on a parity with the fakirs, the mullahs, the religious mendicants of her adopted country.
The Great Mogul | Louis Tracy
British Dictionary definitions for parity (1 of 2)
/ (ˈpærɪtɪ) /
equality of rank, pay, etc
close or exact analogy or equivalence
finance
the amount of a foreign currency equivalent at the established exchange rate to a specific sum of domestic currency
a similar equivalence between different forms of the same national currency, esp the gold equivalent of a unit of gold-standard currency
equality between prices of commodities or securities in two separate markets
physics
a property of a physical system characterized by the behaviour of the sign of its wave function when all spatial coordinates are reversed in direction. The wave function either remains unchanged (even parity) or changes in sign (odd parity)
a quantum number describing this property, equal to +1 for even parity systems and –1 for odd parity systems: Symbol: P See also conservation of parity
maths a relationship between two integers. If both are odd or both even they have the same parity; if one is odd and one even they have different parity
(in the US) a system of government support for farm products
Origin of parity
1British Dictionary definitions for parity (2 of 2)
/ (ˈpærɪtɪ) /
the condition or fact of having given birth
the number of children to which a woman has given birth
Origin of parity
2Collins English Dictionary - Complete & Unabridged 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
Scientific definitions for parity
[ păr′ĭ-tē ]
The property of a physical system that entails how the system would behave if the coordinate system were reversed, each dimension changing sign from x, y, z to -x, -y, -z. If a system behaves in the same way when the coordinate system is reversed, then it is said to have even parity; if it does not, it is said to have odd parity. For bosons, the antiparticle of any given particle has the same parity, odd or even, as that particle. For fermions, the antiparticle has the opposite parity. See also conservation law parity conjugation.
A quantum number, either +1 or -1, that mathematically describes this property.
The number of 1's in a piece of binary code, generally taken as the quality of odd or even rather than as a specific number. The parity of packets of binary data is often transmitted along with the data to help detect whether the value of any bits has been altered.
The American Heritage® Science Dictionary Copyright © 2011. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.
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