decode的意思和读音

decode

: [diˈkoʊd] : [diːˈkəʊd]

v.);););

decodes  decoding  decoded  

v.encode

v.decipher,make out,make sense of,interpret,translate

decodev.

1.~ sth);to find the meaning of sth, especially sth that has been written in code

2.~ sthto receive an electronic signal and change it into pictures that can be shown on a television screen

decoding equipment

3.~ sthto understand the meaning of sth in a foreign language

v.1.;;

v.1.to succeed in understanding the meaning of a message written in code2.if a computer decodes information, it changes it into a form that you can understand3.to change digital electronic signals into a picture and sound on your television4.to understand the meaning of a word, especially in a foreign language, without being able to encode it use it correctly in a sentence of your own1.to succeed in understanding the meaning of a message written in code2.if a computer decodes information, it changes it into a form that you can understand3.to change digital electronic signals into a picture and sound on your television4.to understand the meaning of a word, especially in a foreign language, without being able to encode it use it correctly in a sentence of your own

1. [ quality or style of a translation] [ decode;decipher] [ translated name] ...

3. DataForwarding( Decode) EmbeddedChips( ) ...

4. campus n. () decode vt. eaves n. ...

5. decelerate decode defame ...

7. Data Forwarding( Decode) Embedded Chips( ) ...

8. cd : decode encode : ...

:,,,,,,,

1.Voynich asked the leading cryptographers of his day to decode the odd script, which did not match that of any known language.稿

2.I decode the rest of the gate locations. You get the hobgoblins ready to move the moment I'm done.

3.Such applications are decades away, but "you could use algorithms like this to decode other things than vision, " said Gallant.

4.He made sure humanity would not be able to use them until we had become sophisticated enough to decode them.

5.Translation is an activity for a translator to decode information in a source text and render it into a target one.

6.In typical Russian fashion, Moscow's chattering classes were left trying to decode oblique signals emanating from the Kremlin.

7.It is much easier to call the functions directly instead of trying to decode the data structures from outside the process.

8.Like RISC, these early computers were direct-execution machines that ha simple and easy-to-decode instruction sets.RISC

9.I guess everyone's hoping that if the aliens are anything like us, they'll send simple pictures and easy-to-decode messages.

10.Since the key card he is working on is a fake Milo runs into problems trying to decode it.