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frame |
Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Medical, Idioms, Wikipedia, Hutchinson | 0.17 sec. |
frame(1) In computer graphics, one screenful of data or its equivalent storage space. See frame buffer. frame 1. a. one of a series of individual exposures on a strip of film used in making motion pictures b. an individual exposure on a film used in still photography c. an individual picture in a comic strip 2. a. a television picture scanned by one or more electron beams at a particular frequency b. the area of the picture so formed 3. Billiards snooker a. the wooden triangle used to set up the balls b. the balls when set up c. a single game finished when all the balls have been potted 4. Computing (on a website) a self-contained section that functions independently from other parts; by using frames, a website designer can make some areas of a website remain constant while others change according to the choices made by the internet user 5. short for cold frame 6. a machine or part of a machine over which yarn is stretched in the production of textiles 7. (in telecommunications, computers, etc.) one cycle of a regularly recurring number of pulses in a pulse train Frame Janet. 1924--2004, and New Zealand writer: author of the novels Owls Do Cry (1957) and Faces in the Water (1961), the collection of verse The Pocket (1967), and volumes of autobiography including An Angel at My Table (1984), which was made into a film in 1990
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The new "freedom" she calls for, in other words, might be that freedom of entering the marketplace as an a cknowledged commodity with an assigned market value, of having a more comfortable place in the museum because the institution's historical demand for good, sellable, framable, medium-specific work is satisfied. Players can even earn a framable certificate of achievement and print ribbons from the competition as keepsakes of their events. Professional-grade digital images can be confidently printed in framable sizes up to 11" x 14" free of jagged edges, artifacts or pixelation. |
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