Online Google Dictionary

buffering 中文解釋 wordnet sense Collocation Usage Collins Definition
Verb
/ˈbəfər/,
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buffered, past participle; buffers, 3rd person singular present; buffering, present participle; buffered, past tense;
  1. Lessen or moderate the impact of (something)
    • - the massage helped to buffer the strain
  2. Treat with a chemical buffer
    • - add organic matter to buffer the resulting alkalinity

  1. (Buffers (chemistry)) A buffer solution is an aqueous solution consisting of a mixture of a weak acid and its conjugate base or a weak base and its conjugate acid. It has the property that the pH of the solution changes very little when a small amount of strong acid or base is added to it. ...
  2. (buffered) Copying data into a buffer.
  3. (buffered) A term used to describe material to which slightly water-soluble acid or base has been added in order to stabilize the pH. In paper, this is an alkaline substance (e.g. ...
  4. (Buffered (Paper)) Acid free and contains 2% calcium carbonate (or other compound) to act as a barrier to reduce future acid contamination.  See Also Archival webpage
  5. (Buffered) Also known as registered memory because the modules have a register that places a smaller electric load on the memory. This allows the devices to be more stable. Essentially, the data is being cached in the RAM. ...
  6. (Buffered) Materials can be buffered by incorporating an alkaline additive, like calcium carbonate, into their structure during manufacture. The alkaline additive, sometimes called an alkaline reserve, is designed to neutralize any acids that are formed by the base material during aging. . ...
  7. (Buffered) Products capable of maintaining the core of a solution. (Buffered paper prevents acid from moving from a photograph to a paper).
  8. (Buffered) Resistance to change in pH as a result of the presence in water of a weak acid and its salts
  9. (Buffered) leather is also known as suede or nubuc. This is where the surface of the leather has been buffed or abrasion.
  10. (Buffered) paper contains alkaline materials into the paper-making process, in order to offset or cancel out the effects of acids.
  11. (Buffered) refers to pills that include an antacid to neutralizing stomach acid, which may help reduce stomach upset or increase BIOAVAILABILITY of a drug.
  12. (buffered) Data that is collected but not made immediately available. For example streaming media data viewable using a tool like RealMedia Player is buffered.
  13. (buffered) The addition of an alkaline reserve to a material to control the pH over an extended time. Commonly used in the paper industry to identify that alkaline filler has been added during the papermaking process to offset any acid that is present or that it may come in contact with later. ...
  14. Buffered items have an alkaline filler. This prevents acid from one item from being transferred to another.
  15. Buffered means adding logic, particularly drivers, to a SIMM or DIMM to increase the output current. Buffering is used to overcome signal attenuation due to capacitive loading. Modules that are "buffered" usually have small buffer chips mounted on them.
  16. (Buffers) A storage area, device, or memory area in which date can be placed temporarily.
  17. (Buffers) Compounds like Baking Soda, or calcium carbonate, that stabilize the pH at or above neutral.
  18. (Buffers) Unicode Services that operate on abstract character data have parameters for a source buffer and target buffer. Some services also require a work buffer to store intermediate results. ...
  19. (Buffers) undisturbed vegetated zone between a land use and a spring.  These zones are meant as a protective barrier between the resources and harmful activities.
  20. (buffers) Chemicals that maintain pH values within narrow limits by absorbing or releasing hydrogen ions.
  21. (buffers) a zone or strip of forest land that separates two areas, usually to protect a sensitive area from the impacts of the adjacent development activities
  22. (buffers) term used in social influence research to refer to any aspect of a situation that protects people from having to confront the consequences of their actions.
  23. A buffer is a polygon that encloses all areas within a set distance of the spatial features. Points, lines, and polygons can all have buffers placed around them. ...
  24. The capacity to maintain hydrogen ion concentration (pH) on addition of acid or alkali.
  25. The neutralizing of acids in paper by adding an alkaline substance (usually calcium carbonate or magnesium carbonate) into the paper pulp. The buffer acts as a protection from the acid in the paper or from pollution in the environment.