adj
(of electrical wiring) Carrying electrical current; energized.
v
(music, transitive) To tune (an instrument).
n
(music) An audio processor that corrects the pitch of a recorded track, also used to distort vocals in electronic music.
n
Any device that performs automatic tuning (as of an engine or industrial process).
n
Alternative form of auto-tune [(music) An audio processor that corrects the pitch of a recorded track, also used to distort vocals in electronic music.]
adj
Having been subject to autotuning; featuring or utilizing autotuning.
n
Alternative form of auto-tuner [Any device that performs automatic tuning (as of an engine or industrial process).]
v
(computing) To examine a stack trace
v
(electronics) To give a bias to.
n
A breakdown of statistics; a detailed view of component parts.
v
(music, transitive) To give an alternative tuning to (the open strings of a string instrument).
v
(transitive, medicine, informal) To perform a CT scan on.
v
(transitive, computing) Clipping of defragment. [(computing) To run a process that collects fragments of files and sorts them into contiguous sections on one or more hard disks or hard disk partitions, thus speeding up file management.]
n
(music) An audio effects unit that introduces a controlled delay.
v
(audio engineering) To reverse the downmixing process, recovering channels or stems.
n
(computing) A backspace that erases the character at the previous position, in addition to moving the cursor.
v
(music) To intentionally lower or raise the pitch produced by a musical instrument. Often done to produce sounds not normally possible, or in the case of stringed instruments to reduce tension for the purposes of shipping or maintenance.
n
A mechanical device used to simplify the tuning of a stringed instrument during performance, allowing the musician to reach notes outside the normal range of the instrument.
n
(physics) The difference between actual frequency and resonance frequency.
v
(transitive) To bring out images latent in photographic film.
n
The mixing of a number of distinct audio channels to produce a lower number of channels.
n
A process or algorithm that downsamples.
v
To tune a guitar to a lower pitch than normal
adj
electronically tuneable
v
To adjust the position, as of an electronic device, in order to provide better reception or signal.
v
Alternative form of fine-tune [(transitive) To make small adjustments to (something) until it is optimal.]
v
(transitive) To make small adjustments to (something) until it is optimal.
v
(transitive) To apply the FOIL algorithm to.
v
To change the frequency of a signal by such a process
v
(transitive, music) To change the tone or pitch of the voice when speaking or singing.
n
Any device or process that interconverts.
v
To attune to; to set at; to pitch.
v
(transitive) To make (someone) focus or concentrate on (something); to make (someone) understand.
n
An electronic device or audio software endowed with microtuning capabilities specifically designed and used to modify the tuning of musical instruments, hence allowing for microtonal scales, just intonation scales and tunings other than the twelve-tone equal temperament to be played.
v
(transitive) To change the pitch, intensity or tone of one's voice or of a musical instrument
v
(computing) To run a processor (CPU), or any electronic logic device, at a speed higher than is recommended by the manufacturer.
n
(electrical engineering) The act of coupling two tuned transformers so as to create a broader bandwidth.
v
(cartography) To print a text label or other graphic feature on top of another symbol.
n
A device used to oversample a signal
n
(electronics) A pullup resistor.
v
(transitive) To emphasize; to stress.
n
(programming) A sequential list of values specified by an iterator.
v
(transitive) To attune again or anew.
n
The process of reattuning.
adj
(computing) Being or relating to a form of I/O by which a single procedure call sequentially writes data from multiple buffers to a single data stream, or reads data from a stream into multiple buffers.
v
To adjust the homogeneity of a magnetic field, after the mechanical devices once used for the purpose.
v
(computing, dated) To move data records up in memory to make space to insert further records.
v
(transitive) To modify the intended behaviour of (hardware) unofficially by the use of software.
v
(electronics) To reduce unwanted frequencies in a signal.
n
A mark on any scale of measurement; a unit of measurement.
adj
(of an audio signal) Altered in speed or duration without affecting the original pitch.
v
To retransmit the programmes of a TV channel at a different time of day.
n
A computer program that automatically transposes music from one key to another.
v
To adjust the frequency on a radio or TV set, so as to receive the desired channel.
v
To change the channel or frequency away from.
v
(intransitive, music) To tune one's instrument in preparation for performance.
n
A series of preparations for vigorous exercise; a warm-up
n
A device, electronic or mechanical, that helps a person tune a musical instrument by showing the deviation of the played pitch from the desired pitch.
n
Alternative form of tune-up [A series of adjustments to an engine in order to improve its performance]
v
(transitive, informal) To adjust slightly; to fine-tune.
n
(electrical engineering) The act of coupling two tuned transformers so as to create a narrower bandwidth.
n
(electronics) Conversion of a lower radio frequency to a higher frequency, possibly using a mixer.
n
A device or software that upconverts.
n
A process or algorithm that upsamples.
n
A secondary control input with finer control than the primary, or coarse, input; for example the vernier frequency tuning knob on a radio.
n
A tool that can change the tone or pitch of or add distortion to a user's voice.
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