˜yĐÄvlog

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dial-up

[ dahy-uhl-uhp, dahyl- ]

adjective

Computers.
  1. relating to or denoting a type of computer data transmission encoded in audio format and transmitted through a telephone call to an internet service provider:

    A dial-up connection to the internet is too slow to play most online video games.



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˜yĐÄvlog History and Origins

Origin of dial-up1

First recorded in 1960–65; adjective use of verb phrase dial up
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

"I am old enough that I remember when we had dial-up internet, and AOL gave you 10 hours a month or five hours a month or whatever your package was," Altman said.

From

Justice Clarence Thomas added that “we’re in an entirely different world” from Ashcroft, which “was a world of dial-up internet.”

From

“It’s just a dial-up of our quality, to differentiate,” she said.

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Net neutrality has been a partisan football for more than two decades, or ever since high-speed broadband connections began to supplant dial-up modems.

From

The distinctions lie in the specifics, and rom-coms succeed on how memorable those specifics are: enduring a weird Welsh roommate, faking a climax in Katz’s, skewering terrible Christmas sweaters, falling in love over the radio, leading your colleagues in “Thriller” at a work function, enjoying the dulcet strains of AOL’s dial-up tone.

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