From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishtwo-dimensionalˌtwo-diˈmensional ●○○ adjective 1 HMFLATflat a two-dimensional shape2 ACHARACTER/PERSONALITYa two-dimensional character in a book, play etc does not seem like a real person
Examples from the Corpus
two-dimensional• For example, two-dimensional animals living on a one-dimensional earth would have to climb over each other in order to get past each other.• a two-dimensional drawing• The mean velocity also varies vertically, and we shall confine attention to two-dimensional flow.• These two-dimensional planes cutting through nine-dimensional genetic space give some feeling for what it means to walk through Biomorph Land.• To see why, think of the two-dimensional rubber balloon universe with pebbles stuck to it to represent the galaxies.• Think of the two-dimensional rubber balloon universe.• Figure 3.1 shows one two-dimensional surface, a spherical surface; and Fig. 3.2 shows another, a cylindrical surface.• Figure 21.5 shows its distribution in a two-dimensional wake.• These artists manipulate paper pulp to make sculptures, reliefs, embossed and two-dimensional work.