Biune

/ˈbaɪ.juːn/

द्वि-एक (दो होकर भी एक); द्विगुणित/द्विरूप

Origin & History

From Latin bi- (“two”) + unus (“one”), formed as bi- + -une (“one”), attested chiefly in theological/philosophical writing.

लैटिन bi- (“दो”) + unus (“एक”) से बना, bi- + -une (“एक”) के रूप में; इसका प्रमाण मुख्यतः धर्मशास्त्रीय/दार्शनिक लेखन में मिलता है।

Definition

Biune describes something that is two and yet one—made of two parts that form a single unity (often used in theology/philosophy; archaic/rare in modern English).

'Biune' उस चीज़ का वर्णन करता है जो दो होकर भी एक हो—दो भागों से मिलकर बनी एक एकता (अक्सर धर्मशास्त्र/दर्शन में; आधुनिक अंग्रेज़ी में दुर्लभ/पुराना प्रयोग)।

Parts of Speech

Adjective:
Some writers spoke of a biune nature in their theological arguments.
कुछ लेखकों ने अपने धर्मशास्त्रीय तर्कों में 'द्वि-एक' (दो होकर भी एक) स्वभाव की बात की।

Usage Examples

The poem presents a biune image: grief and hope fused into a single feeling.
In older texts, the term biune is used to emphasize unity within duality.
The concept was framed as biune rather than merely dual.

Synonyms

Related Forms

Noun
Biunity / Bi-unity
Adjective

Idioms & Phrases

Biune nature
द्वि-एक स्वभाव (दो होकर भी एक)
Biune unity
द्वि-एक एकता (द्वैत में एकता)