decoded 的 2 个定义
de·cod·ed, de·cod·ing.
- to translate from a code into the original language or form.
- to extract meaning from.
- Television. to unscramble so as to provide a video picture for cable subscribers.
de·cod·ed, de·cod·ing.
- to work at decoding.
decoded 近义词
decipher
更多decoded例句
- Meet Mo-DBRS, a setup that could fundamentally change how we decode the human brain.
- When that signal is sent to your TV or soundbar, the device has to decode the audio in order to play it over your speakers, and that process takes time.
- Frequently, this delay is inherent to how TVs and soundbars decode audio.
- As long as you can decode the informational algorithms behind the organisms and their heritable material, you can incorporate those into your own kind of substrates.
- The first series follows the work of scientists trying to decode extraterrestrial messages using high-end technology developed by- yes you guessed it – General Electric.
- The next one will be to teach cells to decode the information.
- This track is so confusing and multi-layered, it would take a team of Mensa members with Ph.D.s in Ebonics to decode.
- But she arguably did more than anyone to decode what was then the oldest written European language known to exist.
- He softened the rhetoric here and there, but if you decode his substantive words, he said nothing new.
- Hyde Park is partly in Paddington, a name which the authorities decode into “town of the children of Paeda”.
- Afraid for a moment that you'd be off before we could decode it.
- Also, he was hungry, and he did not hurry over his dinner in order to decode it.
- She sets herself wearily to decode some sort of definite meaning out of Mother's elliptic style.
- The Secretary, whose business it was to decode the official telegrams, commenced his task with but languid interest.