Definition
Relating to or characterized by having two hands; two-handed.
Etymology
From Latin 'bi-' (two) and 'manus' (hand), with the suffix '-al' forming an adjective; related to the taxonomic term Bimana.
Kelly Says
Even though 'bimanal' is rarely used now, it highlights an fascinating linguistic shift—we once needed words to describe what we thought made humans unique, but as we learned more about animal cognition, the distinction became less meaningful.
Translations
ARالعربية
بِمَانَال
bi-ma-nal
CACatalà
bimanal
bee-MAH-nal
CSČeština
bimanal
bee-MAH-nal
DADansk
bimanal
bee-MAH-nal
DEDeutsch
Bimanal
bee-mah-nal
ESEspañol
bimanal
bee-mah-nal
FISuomi
bimanal
bee-MAH-nal
FRFrançais
bimanal
bee-mah-nal
HEעברית
בִּימָנָל
bee-MAH-nal
HUMagyar
bimanal
bee-MAH-nal
IDBahasa Indonesia
bimanal
bee-MAH-nal
ITItaliano
bimanal
bee-mah-nal
MSBahasa Melayu
bimanal
bee-MAH-nal
NLNederlands
bimanal
bee-MAH-nal
NONorsk
bimanal
bee-MAH-nal
PLPolski
bimanal
bee-MAH-nal
PTPortuguês
bimanal
bee-mah-nal
RORomână
bimanal
bee-MAH-nal
RUРусский
биманал
bee-mah-nal
SVSvenska
bimanal
bee-MAH-nal
SWKiswahili
bimanal
bee-MAH-nal
TEతెలుగు
బిమానం
bee-ma-nam
TRTürkçe
bimanal
bee-MAH-nal
UKУкраїнська
біманал
bee-mah-nal
URاردو
بِمَانَال
bee-MAH-nal
VITiếng Việt
bimanal
bee-MAH-nal