Online Google Dictionary

censored 中文解釋 wordnet sense Collocation Usage Collins Definition
Verb
/ˈsensər/,
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censors, 3rd person singular present; censored, past tense; censored, past participle; censoring, present participle;
  1. Examine (a book, movie, etc.) officially and suppress unacceptable parts of it
    • - my mail was being censored

  1. suppressed or subject to censorship; "the censored press in some countries"
  2. (censor) ban: forbid the public distribution of ( a movie or a newspaper)
  3. (censor) someone who censures or condemns
  4. (censoring) counterintelligence achieved by banning or deleting any information of value to the enemy
  5. (censoring) deleting parts of publications or correspondence or theatrical performances
  6. Private Snafu is the title character of a series of black-and-white American instructional cartoon shorts produced between 1943 and 1945 during World War II. The character was created by director Frank Capra, chairman of the U.S. ...
  7. (Censor (ancient Rome)) The censor was an officer in ancient Rome who was responsible for maintaining the census, supervising public morality, and overseeing certain aspects of the government's finances.
  8. (Censor (song)) Censor is a single by the band Skinny Puppy created for the song "Dogshit".
  9. (Censoring (clinical trials)) The term censoring is used in clinical trials to refer to mathematically removing a patient from the survival curve at the end of their follow-up time. Censoring a patient will reduce the sample size for analyzing after the time of the censorship. ...
  10. (Censoring (statistics)) In statistics, engineering, and medical research, censoring occurs when the value of an observation is only partially known.
  11. Having had objectionable content removed; being something someone has censored
  12. (censor) A Roman magistrate, originally a census administrator, by Classical times a high judge of public behavior and morality; An official responsible for the removal of objectionable or sensitive content; One who censures or condemns; A hypothetical subconscious agency which filters ...
  13. (CENSOR) (tiijltjttjs'), the name of two magis­trates of high rank in the Roman republic. Their office was called Censura (rifjLrjreia or rijj.7}ria). The Census, which was a register of Roman citizens and of their property, was first estab­lished by Servius Tullius, the fifth king of Rome. ...
  14. (Censor) A theologian deputed by a bishop,  religious superior, or Roman Congregation, to judge whether an individual's writing or writings contain anything contrary to faith and morals. The Censor indicates that a work has nothing contrary to faith and morals by giving it his nihil obstat. ...
  15. (Censor) Roman official charged with the census
  16. (censor) (Latin) Roman magistrate elected every five (5) years for a 1½ year term, first instituted in 443 BCE; as the title implies, the censor conducted the census of Roman citizens and property for tax assessment; revised the rolls of senators and equestrians; originally a patrician position ...
  17. (censor) bleep The 'tribes' in the Roman state were not ethnic but assigned by the censors only the descendants of ancient citizen families considered themselves related to their tribe by blood.
  18. (censor) magistrate whose duty was to review the list of senators and to keep a close check on the registration and classification of citizens. A censor was an ex-consul & the position was elected every five years.
  19. (CENSORING) A term used in survival or time-to-event analyses to denote an individual who has not experienced the event of interest as of a specific point in follow-up, e.g. time of interim analysis, end of study, or time at lost to follow-up. ...
  20. (Censoring) The censorship indicates various forms of infringements to the freedom of expression, before and/or after their publication (a priori and a posteriori censorship).
  21. (Censoring) We are accustomed to use "censored" to indicate that something has been withheld for some reason. The term is used in working with time-related data such as survival analysis (indicate this to be a glossary term) to indicate missing observations rather than withheld information. ...
  22. (censoring) In an experiment in which subjects are followed over time until an event of interest (such as death or other type of failure) occurs, it is not always possible to follow every subject until the event is observed. ...