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Look up: Filter

  1. Filter
    To remove impurities by passing through paper, cheesecloth or chinoise.
    Found on http://www.goodcooking.com/basic_ck.htm

  2. Filter
    A rule that stipulates when a security should be bought or sold according to past price action.
    Found on http://www.nytimes.com/library/financial

  3. Filter
    See Colour Filter.
    Found on http://www.dramatic.com.au/glossary/glos

  4. Filter
    Hardware or software designed to restrict access to certain areas on the Internet.
    Found on http://www.mantex.co.uk/samples/glo-2.ht

  5. filter
    [n] - an electrical device that alters the frequency spectrum of signals passing through it 2. [n] - device that removes something from whatever passes through it 3. [v] - remove by passing through a filter
    Found on http://www.webdictionary.co.uk/definitio

  6. Filter
    Something with small holes in it used in filtering.
    Found on http://www.longman.co.uk/tt_secsci/resou

  7. Filter
    1) A device that removes signals with frequencies above or below a certain point called the cut-off frequency.
    2) An equalizer section, used in this sense because filters are used with other components to give an equalizer its frequency response characteristics.
    3) The action of removing signals of some frequencies and leaving the rest.
    4) A mechanical device to smooth out speed variations in tape machines called a Scrape Flutter Filter- more usually called a Scrape Flutter Idler
    Found on http://www.testing1212.co.uk/a.htm

  8. Filter
    (Digital cameras and photo printers) 1. A transparent, mostly coloured sheet of glass or plastic that can be placed in front of a lens to create a certain effect. 2. An option in an image editing program that enables certain adjustments to the picture, e.g. colour and brightness or foreshortening.
    Found on http://www.olympus.co.uk/consumer/208_10

  9. Filter
    To remove impurities or solid particles from a liquid or gas, e.g., the removal of dust particles from air that is breathed in as it passes the hairs that line the nose.
    Found on http://www.spinalnet.co.uk/EEndCom/GBCON

  10. Filter
    a circuit which permits certain frequencies to pass easily while inhibiting or preventing others. Typical filters include low pass, high pass, band pass, and band reject. A function that cuts off a specific frequency band to change a sounds brightness, thickness and other qualities. A few common filter types are Low-pass, High-pass and Bandpass. A …
    Found on http://www.traditionalmusic.co.uk/music%

  11. Filter
    Audio, Electronics, Signal ProcessingAny of various electric, electronic, acoustic, or optical devices used to reject signals, vibrations, or radiation of certain frequencies while passing others. Think sieve: pass what you want, reject all else. For audio use the most common electronic filter is a bandpass filter, characterized by three parameters…
    Found on http://www.diracdelta.co.uk/science/sour

  12. Filter
    To separate an insoluble solid from a liquid by pour it through a solid (usually paper) to trap the solid particles and separate them from the liquid.
    Found on http://www.chemicalglossary.net/definiti

  13. Filter
    A frequency sensitive network, consisting normally of inductors and capacitors, that attenuates noise and ripple components of a DC rectified output, or EMI components which might affect an input supply
    Found on http://www.albacom.co.uk/Web/Site/defenc

  14. Filter
    The name for any device that imposes a time constant on or removes harmonics or disturbances from a signal. Current common usage is for a device that is installed on the a.c. supply to a drive for the purposes of E.M.C. noise immunity and suppression.
    Found on http://www.sprint-electric.com/glossary.

  15. Filter
    Creative effects applied with an illustration program to selectively emphasise or de-emphasise all or portions of an image. Filters can be used to sharpen or blur images or apply special effects. Filters also allow text and graphic images to look like they were created using textured backgrounds or applied on various types of backgrounds using diff…
    Found on http://www.britishprint.com/tw/glossary.

  16. Filter
    An electrical circuit that passes frequencies within a specified frequency band and attenuates signals that fall outside of that frequency band.
    Found on http://www.flowmeterdirectory.com/flowme

  17. filter
    1. (Originally Unix, now also MS-DOS) A program that processes an input data stream into an output data stream in some well-defined way, and does no I/O to anywhere else except possibly on error conditions; one designed to be used as a stage in a pipeline (see plumbing). Compare sponge. 2. (functional programming) A higher-order function which tak…
    Found on

  18. filter
    a transducer which transmits energy at frequencies within one or more frequency bands and attenuates energy at all other frequencies Category: Electrical engineering and energy • a transducer or network for separating waves on the basis of their frequency Category: Electrical engineering and energy • the device which is used to modify by transmission the radiant or luminous…
    Found on http://www.mijnwoordenboek.nl/definition

  19. Filter
    A colored piece of glass or other transparent material used over the lens to emphasize, eliminate, or change the color or density (ND) of the entire scene or certain areas within a scene. Also see "colour temperature", "UV". Technically, it explained as a piece of material which restricts the transmission of radiation. Generally coloured to absorb …
    Found on http://www.rodsmith.org.uk/photographic%

  20. filter
    A quick way to select records.
    Found on http://www.stmarys.tlfe.org/subjects/inf

  21. Filter
    Fil"ter noun [ French filtre , the same word as feutre felt, Late Latin filtrum , feltrum , felt, fulled wool, this being used for straining liquors. See Feuter .] Any porous substance, as cloth, paper, sand, or charcoal, through which water or other liquid may passed to cleanse it from the solid or impure matter held in suspension; a chamber or device containing su …
    Found on http://www.encyclo.co.uk/webster/F/29

  22. Filter
    Fil"ter transitive verb [ imperfect & past participle Filtered ; present participle & verbal noun Filtering ] [ Confer French filter . See Filter , noun , and confer Filtrate .] To purify or defecate, as water or other liquid, by causing it to pass through a filter. Filtering paper …
    Found on http://www.encyclo.co.uk/webster/F/29

  23. Filter
    Fil"ter intransitive verb To pass through a filter; to percolate.
    Found on http://www.encyclo.co.uk/webster/F/29

  24. Filter
    Fil"ter noun Same as Philter .
    Found on http://www.encyclo.co.uk/webster/F/29

  25. filter
    1. A porous substance through which a liquid or gas is passed in order to separate it from contained particulate matter or impurities. ... Synonym: filtrum. ... 2. To use or to subject to the action of a filter. ... 3. In diagnostic or therapeutic radiology, a plate made of one or more metals such as aluminum and copper that, placed in the x-or gamma- …
    Found on http://cancerweb.ncl.ac.uk/cgi-bin/omd?f

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21 November 2008

This day in history:
On 21st November 1974 the Provisional IRA plants bombs in two Birmingham pubs: the Mulberry Bush and the Tavern in the Town. Twenty-one people die and 182 are injured. A few minutes before the explosions a warning had been telephoned to the local newspaper, the Birmingham Post and Mail, but it was far too late. The first Birmingham bomb, at the Mulberry Bush pub in the basement of the Rotunda, a 20-storey office and retail complex and it exploded six minutes after the telephone warning. There was not enough time for police to clear the area. Earlier that year nine soldiers were killed when a bomb exploded on a coach on the M62 near Bradford, while two bombs in Guildford killed four soldiers and injured scores of other people. read more

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