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bipolarity

American  
[bahy-poh-lar-i-tee] / ˌbaɪ poʊˈlær ɪ ti /

adjective

  1. the quality or state of having two poles or extremes.

    The election showed a trend toward bipolarity, with almost all voters choosing one of the two largest parties.


Etymology

Origin of bipolarity

First recorded in 1830–40; bipolar ( def. ) + -ity ( def. )

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

The core of his argument is that no two people experience the same combination or severity of symptoms; instead, they experience increasing degrees of bipolarity.

From Los Angeles Times • Feb. 2, 2023

Reviewing the novel a quarter century after diagnosing America’s literary bipolarity in “Paleface and Redskin,” Philip Rahv saluted its “masterful combination”—the demotic and literary, the astringent and poetic.

From The New Yorker • Mar. 11, 2019

I've been reminded many times of this over the years, with brilliant & creative friends whose lives have been slowed down by depression, bipolarity & other forms of mental illnesses.

From New York Times • Mar. 3, 2018

The idea that some kind of six-sided deterrence would work in this roiling cauldron of instability the way it did in the frozen bipolarity of the Cold War is simply ridiculous.

From Washington Post • Jan. 29, 2015

Might this suggest that the prevalence of so-called bipolarity today is not simply an artefact of the marketing of new diagnostic categories?

From The Guardian • Apr. 26, 2013

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