| aliquot |
A small volume of water used as a subsample.
Ãâó: www.utilities.cornell.edu/EIS/Glossary.htm
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| aliasing |
This is an effect caused by sampling an image at to low a rate. It causes rapid change (high texture) areas of an image to appear as a slow change in the sample image. Once this has happened, it is extremely difficult to reproduce the original image from the sample.
Ãâó: www.all-things-photography.com/digital-dictionary....
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| alienate |
To sell or give completely and without reserve; to transfer title to somebody else. A voluntary conveyance of property, especially real property.
Ãâó: www.leanlegal.com/dictionary/a.asp
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| alienation |
In addition to the general modernist or existential sense of alienation as a feeling of exclusion, unbelonging and loneliness, the terms has a quite specific marxist usage. Here, the concept of alienation refers to worker s relation to the product of his/her labour ? that which s/he produces, but does not own and which becomes a commodity. Marx suggests that this relation is as to an alien object.'
Ãâó: www.adamranson.freeserve.co.uk/critical%20concepts...
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| aliasing |
Defects or distortion in a television picture or audio. Defects are typically seen as jagged edges on diagonal lines and twinkling or brightening. In digital video, aliasing is caused by insufficient sampling or poor filtering of the digital video.
Ãâó: www.wgcu.org/watch/hdtv_glossaryofterms.html
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