simplex

Having a single structure; not composite or complex; undivided, unitary.

Adjective

  1. Having a single structure; not composite or complex; undivided, unitary.

    Synonyms: monoplex uniplex

    Antonyms: complex

  2. Of an eye: (supposedly) having pigment on only the posterior surface of the iris and not the anterior surface, and thus appearing blue; this was later found to be inaccurate, as eye colour is due to the amount of pigment in the anterior surface of the iris; also, of eye pigmentation: present only on the posterior surface of the iris; and of a person: having eyes with this form of pigmentation.

    Antonyms: duplex

  3. Of a circuit or device: involving signals which travel in one direction at a time; unidirectional.

    Antonyms: bidirectional duplex

    Coordinate Terms: full duplex half-duplex semiduplex

  4. Of a polyploid organism: having one dominant allele at a given locus on all homologous chromosomes.

    Coordinate Terms: duplex nulliplex triplex

  5. Synonym of heterozygous (“of an organism: having two different alleles in a given gene”).

    Synonyms: heterozygous

  6. Of a word: having no (derivational) affixes; simple, monomorphemic, uncompounded.

    Antonyms: polymorphemic

  7. Of an apartment (or, sometimes, another type of property): having only one floor or storey; single-storey.

    Coordinate Terms: duplex triplex

Origin

The adjective is a learned borrowing from Latin simplex (“plain, simple; single”). The first part, sim-, comes from Proto-Indo-European *sem-, *sm̥- (“one; together”). The second part, -plex, may be from *pleḱ- (“to weave”). The noun is derived from the adjective. The plural forms simplices and simplicia are learned borrowings from Latin simplicēs (masculine or feminine) and simplicia (neuter), respectively plural forms of simplex. Noun sense 1 (“generalization of a triangle or tetrahedron to an arbitrary dimension”) was apparently coined by the Dutch mathematician Pieter Hendrik Schoute (1846–1913) as a short version of Simplicissimum in Mehrdimensionale Geometrie (in German, 1902). (In his pioneering works on algebraic topology, the French mathematician Henri Poincaré (1854–1912) had previously introduced the concept, but not the actual term simplex.)

Related

crux simplex herpes simplex

Derived

nonsimplex simplexity

Noun

  1. A generalization of a triangle or tetrahedron to an arbitrary dimension; more accurately, the convex hull of n+1 affinely independent points in n-dimensional space.
  2. A word which is not compound and contains no derivational affixes (inflectional affixes are usually disregarded); a monomorphemic word.
    • The word weak is a simplex. Its derivative weaken is not.
  3. In full simplex sentence: in transformational grammar: a simple sentence which is the product of a few transformations; a kernel sentence.
    • The question is: is 139. [“Priexal Vanja. ‘arrived Vanya’”] a simplex or is it a cleft structure in which all 'superfluous' constituents were deleted. […] The only indication that 139. is a simplex is the sentence...
  4. An apartment (or, sometimes, another type of property) having only one floor or storey; a single-storey property.

    Coordinate Terms: duplex triplex

Forms

simplexes simplices simplicia

Synonyms

monoplex

Related

simplicial simplicial complex

Derived

cosimplex hypersimplex n-simplex simplex method subsimplex