triáda
Triáda, tríada, or tríade is a term used in several Romance-language contexts to denote a group or set of three related elements. The word derives from Greek and is employed across disciplines to label triads or trios. Because its exact meaning depends on context, triáda is best understood as a general descriptor rather than a single, fixed object.
In music theory, a triad is a three-note chord formed by stacking two intervals of a third.
In sociology and anthropology, a triad refers to a three-person social unit. Triads introduce dynamics that
In medicine and the health sciences, a triad denotes a conventional set of three clinical features used
Beyond these fields, triáda can refer to any three-part grouping used for classification, analysis, or representation,