Mate logo
Home
Apps
MacMac + SafariiOSiPhone + iPadChromeGoogle ChromeFirefoxMozilla FirefoxOperaOperaEdgeMicrosoft Edge
BlogHelp CenterContact
Apps

iPhone + iPad

Help Center, release notes, Download

Mac + Safari

Help Center, release notes, Download

Google Chrome

Help Center, Download

Mozilla Firefox

Help Center, Download

Opera

Help Center, Download

Microsoft Edge

Help Center, Download
Support
DownloadHelp CenterSupported languagesRequest a refundRestore passwordRestore serial codesPrivacy policy
STAY IN TOUCH
ContactTwitterBlog
Site language
free services
Web translatorVerb conjugatorDer Die Das lookupUsage examplesWordsDefinitionIdioms
Mate logo
Home
Apps
MacMac + SafariiOSiPhone + iPadChromeGoogle ChromeFirefoxMozilla FirefoxOperaOperaEdgeMicrosoft Edge
BlogHelp CenterContact
Apps

iPhone + iPad

Help Center, release notes, Download

Mac + Safari

Help Center, release notes, Download

Google Chrome

Help Center, Download

Mozilla Firefox

Help Center, Download

Opera

Help Center, Download

Microsoft Edge

Help Center, Download
Support
DownloadHelp CenterSupported languagesRequest a refundRestore passwordRestore serial codesPrivacy policy
STAY IN TOUCH
ContactTwitterBlog
Site language
free services
Web translatorVerb conjugatorDer Die Das lookupUsage examplesWordsDefinitionIdioms

Definition of "bicameral" in English

adjective

  1. Being or having a system with two, often unequal, chambers or compartments; of, signifying, relating to, or being the product of such a two-chambered system.

    • the bicameral anatomy of the brain
  2. (government) Of, having, or relating to two separate legislative chambers or houses.

  3. (typography) Of a script or typeface: having two cases, upper case and lower case.

    • 2004, Parmenides, Peter Koch, et al., Carving the Elements: A Companion to the Fragments of Parmenides, page 91, For more than a thousand years, classical Greek has been habitually written in a bicameral, polytonic alphabet (one with caps and lower case and a set of diacritics marking tone and aspiration).
  4. (psychology) Relating to the functions of the two cerebral hemispheres in the history of human beings ‘hearing’ the speech of gods or idols, according to Julian Jaynes's theory of the bicameral mind.

    • [The Linear B Tablets] were written directly in what I am calling the bicameral period. p.80; …to have an idea of the nature and range of the bicameral voices heard in the early civilizations. p.88; …how could [the brain] have been organized so that a bicameral mentality was possible? p.101; Like the queen in a termite nest or a beehive, the idols of a bicameral world are the carefully tended centers of social control, with auditory hallucinations instead of pheromones. p.144; …wherever and whenever civilization first began…there was a succession of kingdoms all with similar characteristics that, somewhat prematurely, I shall call bicameral. p.149; Bicameral gods [of conquering civilizations] are jealous gods. p.156, footnote; …I suggest that given man, language, and cities organized on a bicameral basis, there are only certain fixed patterns into which history can fit. p.159. How can we know that…idols ‘spoke’ in the bicameral sense? p.174.