terms |
trinocular |
As a noun terms
is .
As an adjective trinocular is
using three points of vision, such as a microscope with two standard eyepieces and one camera eyepiece, or a camera rig with three cameras.
binocular |
trinocular |
As adjectives the difference between binocular and trinocular
is that
binocular is using two eyes or viewpoints; especially, using two eyes or viewpoints to ascertain distance while
trinocular is using three points of vision, such as a microscope with two standard eyepieces and one camera eyepiece, or a camera rig with three cameras.
As a noun binocular
is .
trilocular |
trinocular |
As adjectives the difference between trilocular and trinocular
is that
trilocular is having three cells or cavities while
trinocular is using three points of vision, such as a microscope with two standard eyepieces and one camera eyepiece, or a camera rig with three cameras.
trinocular |
trioculate |
see also |
As adjectives the difference between trinocular and trioculate
is that
trinocular is using three points of vision, such as a microscope with two standard eyepieces and one camera eyepiece, or a camera rig with three cameras while
trioculate is having, or appearing to have, three eyes.
monocular |
trinocular |
Related terms |
Trinocular is a related term of monocular.
As adjectives the difference between monocular and trinocular
is that
monocular is having one eye while
trinocular is using three points of vision, such as a microscope with two standard eyepieces and one camera eyepiece, or a camera rig with three cameras.
As a noun monocular
is a monocle.