Used in a Sentence

discriminant

Definitions, parts of speech, synonyms, and sentence examples for discriminant.

Editorial note

There are effectively zero other military means that would have been even close to as selective and discriminant.

Examples16
Definitions3
Parts of speech2

Quick take

Serving to discriminate.

Meaning at a glance

The clearest senses and uses of discriminant gathered in one view.

adjective

Serving to discriminate.

noun

(algebra) An expression that gives information about the roots of a polynomial; for example, the expression D = b² - 4ac determines whether the roots of the quadratic equation ax² + bx + c = 0 are real and distinct (D > 0), real and equal (D = 0) or complex (D < 0).

noun

(geometry) The invariant (on the vector space of forms of degree d in n variables) that vanishes exactly when the corresponding hypersurface in Pⁿ⁻¹ is singular.

Definitions

Core meanings and parts of speech for discriminant.

adjective

Serving to discriminate.

noun

(algebra) An expression that gives information about the roots of a polynomial; for example, the expression D = b² - 4ac determines whether the roots of the quadratic equation ax² + bx + c = 0 are real and distinct (D > 0), real and equal (D = 0) or complex (D < 0).

noun

(geometry) The invariant (on the vector space of forms of degree d in n variables) that vanishes exactly when the corresponding hypersurface in Pⁿ⁻¹ is singular.

Example sentences

1

There are effectively zero other military means that would have been even close to as selective and discriminant.

2

For second degree equations, instead, if the discriminant is negative there are no real solutions.

3

Sorry for the slightly off-topic comment, but you should avoid shortening 'latent dirichlet allocation' to LDA without context because it also means 'linear discriminant analysis'.

4

It's so easy to look down on someone identifying as male as being discriminant but when the opposite is true, the male point of view is often ignored.

5

It also exposes discriminant of the equation, another useful concept (to instantly determine the number real solutions).

6

It's not legal to discriminant here in SF, not even on income type -- but its difficult one to argue.

7

Mucking around with the underlying bytes to change the discriminant and cause type confusion is UB.

8

Literal types shine when you are using them to specify discriminant fields in different types.

9

You don't use methods, but instead switch on the discriminant of the ADT and take different actions (such as updating local variables).

10

Linear discriminant analysis has historically been an important topic in general machine learning.

11

It is, of course, important to note that I didn't pay for either of them That's the discriminant, right there.

12

David Pierce's Whiley also seems to use type unions[1] [0] an important discriminant, C has unions but they're not memory — let alone type — safe.

Quote examples

1

Tagged unions/ADTs make the discriminant explicit, which is exactly why they tend to be reliability-friendly: exhaustive matches + explicit constructors reduce “guessing” and refactor breakage.

2

They explicitly ignore the "negative discriminant" case.

3

Therefore, there is a 50% chance that you are capable of getting pregnant." This ignores the fact that there is another very obvious discriminant - namely, sex - between people who are capable of getting pregnant and people who are not.

4

[Assuming you meant LDA = Linear Discriminant Analysis.] It looks like the toolkit implements "unsupervised" methods, where the datapoints don't have a special "label" feature that is treated specially in the embedding.

Frequently asked questions

Short answers drawn from the clearest meanings and examples for this word.

How do you use discriminant in a sentence?

There are effectively zero other military means that would have been even close to as selective and discriminant.

What does discriminant mean?

Serving to discriminate.

What part of speech is discriminant?

discriminant is commonly used as adjective, noun.