Examples of use of dyad
1. Tameer is promoting four of its showpiece projects including the state–of–the–art «Dyad Tower» in the Dubai Silicon Oasis, the residential marvel of the Al Ameera Village and its celebrated Princess Tower.
2. The sociologist who labels a group of two a "dyad" is willfully unaware of a host of suitable alternatives: "Duet," "duo," "twosome," "pair," and "partners" would surely serve any legitimate academic purpose.
3. Indian and Pakistani nuclear forces have developed at a slow pace, unworried about the kinds of vulnerabilities that the proliferation pessimists worried about, making the choices that have increased the stability of the nuclear dyad in the subcontinent.» In the literature on nuclear issues, either we have polemical and intuitive justification of various political positions or the very dense academic writing that is utterly inaccessible to even an intelligent reader.
4. One day I realized that my father‘s life had shifted from something overshadowing to something disappearing from view ... [and that] my own [ability to bear] witness had become one of a few remaining membranes holding the boundary between life and void." With equal candor, she also admits that she wants to commemorate and shore up her father‘s literary reputation: "What once was a trio – Saul Bellow, Bernard Malamud, Philip Roth – became a dyad, partly because Malamud died first, but also because biographies are a way we designate writers as significant and keep their fiction alive." Like his near–contemporary Bellow, Malamud (1'14–1'86) emerged on the literary scene in the years just after World War II, with the publication of a searching, mildly melancholy novel about a baseball player called "The Natural." It was the same year, 1'52, in which Janna was born – the Malamuds‘ second child and only daughter.