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filtering

/fil-ter/US // ˈfɪl tər //UK // (ˈfɪltə) //

过滤,筛选,滤波,滤波器

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : any substance, as cloth, paper, porous porcelain, or a layer of charcoal or sand, through which liquid or gas is passed to remove suspended impurities or to recover solids.
    • : any device, as a tank or tube, containing such a substance for filtering.
    • : any of various analogous devices, as for removing dust from air or impurities from tobacco smoke, or for eliminating certain kinds of light rays.
    • : something that works like a filter, as by removing, blocking, or separating out certain elements: Kids often talk without a filter. Events can be distorted through the filter of memory.
    • : Informal. a filter-tipped cigarette or cigar.
    • : Photography. a lens screen of dyed gelatin or glass placed on a camera for controlling the rendering of color or for diminishing the intensity of light.Digital Technology.a data manipulation function that changes the color or sharpness of a digital image or overlays an additive or special effect element: Use a sepia filter to give your photos that old-timey look.
    • : Electronics, Physics. a circuit or device that passes certain frequencies and blocks others.
    • : Mathematics. a collection of subsets of a topological space, having the properties that the intersection of two subsets in the collection is a subset in the collection and that any set containing a subset in the collection is in the collection.
    • : Computers. an algorithm that categorizes, sorts, prioritizes, or blocks data through rule-based protocols: an email filter that deletes messages with subject words found commonly in spam.
v.有主动词 verb
  1. 1
    • : to remove by the action of a filter.
    • : Computers. to subject to an algorithmic filter: The search engine will filter your query results based on your location and user profile.
    • : to act as a filter for; to slow or partially obstruct the passage of: The thick leaves filtered the sunlight.
    • : to pass through or as through a filter.
v.无主动词 verb
  1. 1
    • : to pass or slip through slowly, as through an obstruction or a filter: Enemy agents managed to filter into the embattled country.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • Even when they’re available, portable air filters can be expensive, easily costing up to several hundred dollars for a device big enough to clean the air in a single room.

  • Hmmm, Google already had a filter set to not pass all Search Terms into the UI based on traffic volume, so this appears to be them simply moving the threshold.

  • Once the nearby filter is selected, users will see a new UI that Google is calling a “local stores card,” also constructed of local inventory data from merchant feeds.

  • In a blog post in 2016, it detailed what went into the system’s design, along with testing data to back up its claims of a HEPA filter that’s “ten times more efficient than standard automotive filters.”

  • So this fall, classrooms might get new air filters that weren’t there before.

  • We are overwhelmed with data from every quarter, and our capacity to filter fact from fraud is limited.

  • If users want to send naughty photos with a veil of privacy, opt for the pixilated shower door filter.

  • By using some sort of filter—like, perhaps, a universally understood saying—the trait is more easily conveyed.

  • Basically, my mother said with a touch of embarrassment, everyone else seemed to have a filter, so they bought one, too.

  • Somehow, though, I doubt that consumers rush out of the grocery store filter aisle and straight to the testing authorities.

  • At once cover the mouth of the tube with a filter-paper cap moistened with saturated aqueous solution of silver nitrate (1:1).

  • In quantitative work the chemist aims to precipitate this green sulphide, which is more easily collected on a filter.

  • The whole is then well stirred, collected on a filter, drained, and dried.

  • After 24 hours filter the liquor, and evaporate to a pilular consistence.

  • Dissolve and filter off the liquid from the precipitate, and dilute to proper standard.