Dual in a sentence as an adjective

This is just speculation, but the fact that you can't dual-boot Windows on it is a big hint.

They also have dual NVidia graphics cards and sport three 24 inch 1920 x 1200 LCD monitors.

This will make it a lot easier to do dual and multiple launches at extremely competitive prices.

Try to think, instead, of what a dual-sideband suppressed-carrier signal looks like in the time domain.

"In many startups, any payment over $X requires dual signatures for exactly this reason.

There's almost always an absolute requirement for dual criminality -- that is, that the act is illegal in both nations.

Moving to x86 also increased the features of Macs, allowing them to dual-boot Windows and efficiently virtualize other x86-based OSes.

If you're logging on to a remote server to do development,you're not taking advantage of the dual core i5 or 4GB of RAM. You're logged into an image that's giving you maybe 1 GHz of CPU and 512MB of RAM. You're buying a $1,300 machine to do development on a $300 machine, over a shitty internet connection.

This allows for dual analog sticks, a combination of analog and trackball, or further any combination of touchpad, directional pad, or additional components.

I know dozens of my American friends who do the same thing -- hide from seemingly unprecedented expectations and similarly daunting odds, hide from society in alcohol, in television, in dual 2560x1600 monitors, even in exercise.

Dual definitions

adjective

consisting of or involving two parts or components usually in pairs; "an egg with a double yolk"; "a double (binary) star"; "double doors"; "dual controls for pilot and copilot"; "duple (or double) time consists of two (or a multiple of two) beats to a measure"

See also: double duple

adjective

having more than one decidedly dissimilar aspects or qualities; "a double (or dual) role for an actor"; "the office of a clergyman is twofold; public preaching and private influence"- R.W.Emerson; "every episode has its double and treble meaning"-Frederick Harrison

See also: double twofold two-fold treble threefold three-fold

adjective

a grammatical number category referring to two items or units as opposed to one item (singular) or more than two items (plural); "ancient Greek had the dual form but it has merged with the plural form in modern Greek"