Trivalent in a sentence as an adjective

Would going back to the trivalent solve all of the problems?

It is possible to have trivalent logic that's coherent.

Not that it’s a viable strategy but then you could selectively give those people only the trivalent.

I wonder if there is any sort of genetic basis to who might get sick from the trivalent in the small percentage of cases.

Not only SQL, but illustrious languages such as VB6, include built-in trivalent logic.

I suppose this is sarcasm but the results are quite intuitive to me. From my perspective, it's trivial to construct the truth tables for trivalent logic based on a sense of what "should" be in them.

> Some experts fervently hope to avoid reintroduction of the trivalent vaccine.

According to the article, the trivalent vaccine is a live virus and occasionally reverts to a virulent strain.

So while the trivalent vaccine can generally stop outbreaks it also paradoxically causes them in a tiny percentage of cases.

As the article says, the trivalent vaccine is a live, albeit weakened, virus and occasionally reverts to the original virus which means it occasionally causes an outbreak.

"With WPV2 transmission already having been successfully interrupted, the only type 2 poliovirus which still, on very rare occasions, causes paralysis is the type 2 serotype component in trivalent OPV.

Trivalent definitions

adjective

having a valence of three