Topicala
Topicala is a simple, small, meta-search engine, that helps You find the sites you need. Created By Paul Kinlan. Web Hosting by SwitchMedia.
Dictionary Results For "granular" [?]/[OPML]
Ads By Google
Wiktionary Articles [RSS] - [GNU, www.Wiktionary.org]

English

Etymology

Compare French :fr:granulaire|granulaire. See granule

Adjective

  1. Consisting of, or resembling, grains; as, a granular substance. Grainy. Granular limestone, crystalline limestone, or marble, having a granular structure.


Usage notes

A common usage error is to treat the term "granular" as having a well-defined degree, as in "more granular" or "less granular". Such usage is problematic for two reasons:

  • The essential characteristic of being granular is that something is composed of discrete entities as opposed to being continuous, and this is a binary distinction, not a matter of degree.
  • The terms "more granular" and "less granular" are inherently ambiguous: it is not clear whether they intend to indicate finer or coarser granularity. For example, granular sugar is called granular because it is composed of relatively large grains, in contrast with powdered sugar, whose grains are so small that they are not noticeable. Thus, in reference to sugar, "more granular" would refer to coarser granularity. Similarly, if a photograph is "more grainy", it means that the grain particles are larger (coarser) and thus more distinctly visible to the naked eye. Since "grainy" is a synonym for "granular", "more granular" would again refer to coarser granularity in this context. On the other hand, "more granular" is sometimes used in exactly the opposite way: to indicate more plentiful divisions into finer grains.

This usage error can be avoided by instead referring specifically to finer or coarser granularity.

Quotations

  • 1790, Abraham Mills, Some Strata in Ireland and Scotland, in Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London, Vol. 80
  • :This Whyn Dyke is bare at the cliffs ſeveral yards in height, and is near nine feet in width. It conſiſts of an inner part of a granular and ſomewhat porous texture...


References

  • Webster 1913


----

Spanish

Adjective

{{es-adj|f=granular|mpl=granulares|fpl=granulares}}

  1. #English|granular


Verb

  1. to granulate


Conjugation

gl:granular io:granular ta:granular te:granular vi:granular zh:granular

GNU Project's publication of CIDE, the Collaborative International Dictionary of English granular \gran"u*lar\ (gr[a^]n"[-u]*l[~e]r), a. [Cf. F.
granulaire. See Granule.]
Consisting of, or resembling, grains; as, a granular
substance.
[1913 Webster]

granular limestone, crystalline limestone, or marble,
having a granular structure.
[1913 Webster]
WordNet granular
adj 1: composed of or covered with relatively large particles;
"granular sugar"; "gritty sand" [syn: farinaceous, coarse-grained,
grainy, granulose, gritty, mealy, sandy]
2: having a granular structure like that of chondrites [syn: chondritic]
[ant: achondritic]
Moby Dictionary
arenaceous
, arenarious , atomic , breccial , brecciated , coarse ,
coarse-grained
, comminuted , corpuscular , cross-grained , embryonic ,
evanescent
, germinal , grained , grainy , granulate , granulated ,
gravelly
, gritty , gross , impalpable , imperceptible , imponderable ,
inappreciable
, indiscernible , infinitesimal , intangible , invisible ,
microcosmic
, microscopic , molecular , pebbled , pebbly , rough ,
sabulous
, sandy , shingled , shingly , subatomic , tenuous , thin ,
ultramicroscopic
, unrefined , unseeable


Created By Paul Kinlan. Web Hosting by SwitchMedia.