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code

/kohd/US // koʊd //UK // (kəʊd) //

编码,代码,密码,码

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : a system for communication by telegraph, heliograph, etc., in which long and short sounds, light flashes, etc., are used to symbolize the content of a message: Morse code.
    • : a system used for brevity or secrecy of communication, in which arbitrarily chosen words, letters, or symbols are assigned definite meanings.
    • : any set of standards set forth and enforced by a local government agency for the protection of public safety, health, etc., as in the structural safety of buildings , health requirements for plumbing, ventilation, etc. , and the specifications for fire escapes or exits .
    • : a systematically arranged collection or compendium of laws, rules, or regulations.
    • : any authoritative, general, systematic, and written statement of the legal rules and principles applicable in a given legal order to one or more broad areas of life.
    • : a word, letter, number, or other symbol used in a code system to mark, represent, or identify something: The code on the label shows the date of manufacture.
    • : Digital Technology. a set of symbols that can be interpreted by a computer or piece of software: binary code; Java code; ASCII code. the symbolic arrangement of statements or instructions in a computer program, or the set of instructions in such a program: That program took 3000 lines of code.
    • : any system or collection of rules and regulations: a gentleman's code of behavior.
    • : Medicine/Medical. a directive or alert to a hospital team assigned to emergency resuscitation of patients.
    • : Genetics. genetic code.
    • : Linguistics. the system of rules shared by the participants in an act of communication, making possible the transmission and interpretation of messages. one of two distinct styles of language use that differ in degree of explicitness and are sometimes thought to be correlated with differences in social class.Compare elaborated code, restricted code.
v.有主动词 verb
  1. 1

    cod·ed, cod·ing.

    • : to translate into a code; encode.
    • : to categorize or identify by assigning a code to: All specimens were coded prior to the test.
    • : to arrange or enter in a code.
    • : Digital Technology. to write code for: Hire a programmer to code up a website for you.
v.无主动词 verb
  1. 1

    cod·ed, cod·ing.

    • : Genetics. to specify the amino acid sequence of a protein by the sequence of nucleotides comprising the gene for that protein: a gene that codes for the production of insulin.
    • : Digital Technology. to write computer code.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • Unlike other, more complex algorithms, it allows a user to take any video of a person’s face and use it to animate a photo of someone else’s face with only a few lines of code.

  • It will require apps to ask users for permission to collect and share data using a unique code that identifies their iPhones and iPads.

  • Postal workers expedite millions of ballots to voters and then bring completed ones to county election offices, where they are tracked using bar codes.

  • She was told that because of her ZIP code, she was a high-risk patient and was moved to a quarantine room to deliver her baby.

  • Because of an error in the computer code, the researchers say, their findings — that humans outperformed a computer game that simulated quantum mechanics — are not valid.

  • Based on a true story” is film code for “this may or may not have happened, but almost certainly not in this way.

  • In Brazil people color code their underwear according to their needs.

  • These addresses were used by whoever carried out the attack to control the malware and can be found in the malware code itself.

  • The source code for the original “Shamoon” malware is widely known to have leaked.

  • Enforcement of U.S Code, Title VII, Chapter 25A “Export Standards for Grapes and Plums” remains fully funded, thank goodness.

  • It is no part of the present essay to attempt to detail the particulars of a code of social legislation.

  • The minimum wage law ought to form, in one fashion or another, a part of the code of every community.

  • Plato, dissatisfied with the laws of his country, wrote out a code of morals and laws which he thought much better.

  • The objectors consider it to be a most selfish doctrine without any warrant in the civilised code of morality.

  • Why is a cankered tie indissoluble, notwithstanding the great maxim adopted by the code, Quicquid ligatur dissolubile est?