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dual

 - 4 dictionary results

du⋅al

[doo-uhl, dyoo-]
–adjective
1. of, pertaining to, or noting two.
2. composed or consisting of two people, items, parts, etc., together; twofold; double: dual ownership; dual controls on a plane.
3. having a twofold, or double, character or nature.
4. Grammar. being or pertaining to a member of the category of number, as in Old English, Old Russian, or Arabic, that denotes two of the things in question.
–noun Grammar.
5. the dual number.
6. a form in the dual, as Old English git “you two,” as contrasted with ge “you” referring to three or more.

Origin:
1535–45; < L duālis containing two, relating to a pair, equiv. to du(o) two + -ālis -al 1


du⋅al⋅ly, adverb
Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2009.
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du·al   (dōō'əl, dyōō'-)   
adj.  
  1. Composed of two usually like or complementary parts; double: dual controls for pilot and copilot; a car with dual exhaust pipes.

  2. Having a double character or purpose: a belief in the dual nature of reality.

  3. Grammar Of, relating to, or being a number category that indicates two persons or things, as in Greek, Sanskrit, and Old English.

n.   Grammar
  1. The dual number.

  2. An inflected form of a noun, adjective, pronoun, or verb used with two items or people.


[Latin duālis, from duo, two; see dwo- in Indo-European roots.]
du'al·ly adv.
The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition
Copyright © 2009 by Houghton Mifflin Company.
Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
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Word Origin & History

dual 
1607, from L. dualis, from duo "two." Dualism is first recorded 1794, from Fr. dualisme, in philosophical and theological senses. Duality is attested from c.1400.
Online Etymology Dictionary, © 2001 Douglas Harper
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Computing Dictionary

dual mathematics
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)

The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing, © 1993-2007 Denis Howe
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