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Möbius

American  
[-bee-uhs, mey-, moh-, -bee-oos] / ˈmœ bi əs, ˈmeɪ-, ˈmoʊ-, ˈmœ bi ʊs /

noun

  1. August Ferdinand 1790–1868, German mathematician.


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

“Many other countries formerly tied to the U.S. capital markets are now encouraging their own capital markets’ growth and encouraging net investment inflows into their own countries,” said Mark Mobius, a pioneering emerging-markets investor who is currently based in Dubai.

From MarketWatch

Some come just for a picture in the showroom lobby, where an electric blue SU7 on a Mobius strip hangs from a mirrored ceiling.

From The Wall Street Journal

Directed by Lance Oppenheim and produced by Benny and Josh Safdie among others, “Ren Faire” depicts and embodies a Möbius strip of truth and grandiosity.

From New York Times

The sculpture exemplifies a family of mechanical devices, called Möbius kaleidocycles, invented in the Unit, which may offer guidelines for designing chemical compounds with novel electronic properties.

From Science Daily

It was a Möbius strip of a subject.

From Literature