English edit

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Etymology edit

bi- (bi-, two) +‎ Latin secāre (to cut)

Pronunciation edit

Verb edit

bisect (third-person singular simple present bisects, present participle bisecting, simple past and past participle bisected)

  1. (transitive) To cut or divide into two parts.
    • 1911, James George Frazer, The Golden Bough, volume 7, page 84:
      The quadrennial period of games and festivals in Greece was probably arrived at by bisecting an older octennial period.
    1. (transitive, geometry) To divide an angle, line segment, or other figure into two equal parts.
    2. (computing) To perform a binary search on files in source control in order to identify the specific change that introduced a bug etc.

Synonyms edit

Translations edit

Noun edit

bisect (plural bisects)

  1. (geometry) A bisector, which divides into two equal parts.
  2. (philately) An envelope, card, or fragment thereof showing an affixed cut half of a regular issued stamp, over which one or more postal markings have been applied. Typically used in wartime when normal lower rate stamps may not be available.

Translations edit

See also edit

Romanian edit

Etymology edit

Borrowed from French bissexte, from Latin bisextus.

Adjective edit

bisect m or n (feminine singular bisectă, masculine plural bisecți, feminine and neuter plural bisecte)

  1. bissextil

Declension edit