English to Malayalam Dictionary bifurcation

bifurcation

തെലങ്കാന
definition
noun
the bifurcation of the profession into social do-gooders and self-serving iconoclasts
the division of something into two branches or parts.
example
To be sure, each superhero whose life is marked by the invariable 'bifurcation' between ‘secret’ identities inevitably touches down upon the theme of the fractured self and psyche.
However, it is unclear whether these paired last branches are due to poor preservation or to an original 'bifurcation' .
Under conditions of global strategic 'bifurcation' , the old distinctions between civil and international conflict, between internal and external security, and between national and societal security began to erode.
the 'bifurcation' of the profession into social do-gooders and self-serving iconoclasts
But there was a price to be paid, one of fragmentation, or at least 'bifurcation' .
It could yet seek to recreate that 'bifurcation' with a ‘business only’ upgrade and give the Home line its own range of updates.
One keeps wondering what the author, in his chapter on Mexican-Americans, means by ‘cultural 'bifurcation' .’
As each plant had a 'bifurcation' (two branches), two measurements were obtained per leaf stage for each plant.
Both play and opera form an examination of the neurotic 'bifurcation' between fantasy and action.
In tandem with these developments, however, there emerged a form of 'bifurcation' in the handling of the group as a concept and organisation.
The history of playing from 1610 to the closure of 1642 is one of gradual 'bifurcation' into two traditions centred on two types of venue: the open-air amphitheatres and the indoor hall playhouses.
So we see 'bifurcation' between classical languages used by the former, such as Persian, Sanskrit and English, and the regional languages and dialects that the common folk used.
History and textual theory continue to constitute the principal 'bifurcation' in literary studies, and those two methods of inquiry frequently elicit professions of faith rather than reasoned argumentation.
The Parliament on Tuesday gave its approval for 'bifurcation' of the Trust into two companies.
A 'bifurcation' here allows cars to race ahead through another tunnel.
However, she does not accept his theory of class bifurcation as the sole element in the perpetuation of class 'bifurcation' .
Perhaps this parallel interhuman development, this 'bifurcation' in the value of communication, is most telling.
the 'bifurcation' of the profession
In many ways there was a kind of 'bifurcation' of social history in the field of Latin America.
This cultural 'bifurcation' is aggravated by the fact that between our two warfighting cultures, one human-centric and one technology-centric, the latter currently predominates.
Under these conditions, the traditional 'bifurcation' between what a government may lawfully do in peace time, and what powers it may claim in war time, no longer make much sense.
In this connection, he also reiterated the demand for 'bifurcation' of the Cement Factory from the parent organisation.
This perceptual 'bifurcation' is anything but a liberal tendency.
We reject the habitual 'bifurcation' of the researcher's image into ‘the economist’ and ‘the sociologist.’
right aortic 'bifurcation' nodes were seen
The overall morphology of the colony was not observed, but it is presumed to have been bushy based on the size and shape of the branches and branch 'bifurcations' .
They give way to secondary branches and multiple 'bifurcations' that reflect the path of dielectric breakdown within the soil-gravel horizon.
We have had many 'bifurcations' after the revolution in 1979.
For this calculation, the polytomies in the tree had to be resolved into 'bifurcations' by introducing minute branch lengths.
The Northern line, with its 'bifurcations' and branches, is similar.
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