释义 |
var·i·ant I. \-nt\ adjective Etymology: Middle English, from Middle French, from Latin variant-, varians, present participle of variare to vary 1. obsolete : tending to, undergoing, or exhibiting change : not constant, unchanging, or uniform : variable, fickle 2. : manifesting variety : marked by diversity : variegated, varied < long strip of variant country — M.H.Ellis > 3. a. : different from others of its kind or class : exhibiting slight difference, alteration, or disagreement < the principal variant points of view — A.T.Weaver > < a phrase … subject to variant interpretation by successive scholars — Language > < development of these variant religious groups — E.T.Thompson > b. : not definitive, generally accepted, or commonly found : modified < an appendix which contains some variant readings — B.R.Redman > < rare and elusive variant editions — L.C.Wroth > II. noun (-s) 1. a. : one of two or more persons or things exhibiting usually slight differences : variation < variants of a folk song > < that all societies are but variants of one another — Thornton Wilder > b. : one that varies from the original or archetype < most military campaigns are … variants on a historical pattern — New Republic > c. : one that exhibits variation from a type or norm : mutation; often : one whose behavior is at variance with societal norms — compare deviant 2. a. : one of two or more different spellings (as labor and labour or indexes and indices) or pronunciations (as of economics \ek-, ēk-\) of the same word b. : one of two or more words or word elements (as biologic and biological or stomat- and stomato-) of essentially the same meaning differing only in the presence or absence of an affix 3. : allophone 4. : a cipher element or code group having the same significance as another and used to impede cryptanalysis |