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decouple
[ dee-kuhp-uhl ]
verb (used with object)
- to cause to become separated, disconnected, or divergent; uncouple.
- to absorb the shock of (a nuclear explosion):
a surrounding mass of earth and rock can decouple a nuclear blast.
- Electronics. to loosen or eliminate the coupling of (a signal between two circuits).
verb (used without object)
- to separate or diverge from an existing connection; uncouple.
decouple
/ ËŒ»å¾±Ëˈ°ìÊŒ±èÉ™±ô /
verb
- tr to separate (joined or coupled subsystems) thereby enabling them to exist and operate separately
Other ˜yÐÄvlog Forms
- »å±ð·³¦´Ç³Üp±ô±ð°ù noun
˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Example Sentences
The track’s operators are pushing for something called “decoupling,†which would mean it could operate its slot-based casino without having to run horse racing.
If we decouple gender from food, maybe more will rethink their consumption of animals.
"Our team realized that by designing foldable bottlebrush polymers that could store extra length within their own structure, we could 'decouple' stiffness and extensibility -- in other words, build in stretchability without sacrificing stiffness," Cai said.
This model effectively captured intensity variations from different scanning parameters and identified complex correlations with abnormality types by decoupling spatial features from each MRI sequence, leading to high classification accuracy.
Trump threatened to impose massive trade tariffs on Chinese goods coming into the US, and he may push Europe to decouple more from China’s economy.
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