Online Google Dictionary

wafer 中文解釋 wordnet sense Collocation Usage Collins Definition
Verb
/ˈwāfər/,
Font size:

wafers, plural;
  1. Fasten or seal (a letter, document, etc.) with a wafer

Noun
  1. A very thin, light, crisp, sweet cookie or cracker, esp. one of a kind eaten with ice cream

  2. A thin disk of unleavened bread used in the Eucharist

  3. A very thin slice of a semiconductor crystal used as the substrate for solid-state circuitry

  4. A small disk of dried paste formerly used for fastening letters or holding papers together

  5. A round, thin piece of something
    • - a wafer of ice

  1. a small adhesive disk of paste; used to seal letters
  2. a small thin crisp cake or cookie
  3. thin disk of unleavened bread used in a religious service (especially in the celebration of the Eucharist)
  4. In cooking, a wafer is a crisp, often sweet, very thin, flat, and dry biscuit, often used to decorate ice cream. Wafers can also be made into cookies with cream flavoring sandwiched between them. ...
  5. A wafer is a thin slice of semiconductor material, such as a silicon crystal, used in the fabrication of integrated circuits and other microdevices. ...
  6. Wafer (Weafer, Weaver) is an English surname, and may refer to
  7. A light, thin, flat biscuit; A thin disk of consecrated unleavened bread used in communion; A soft disk originally made of flour, and later of gelatin or a similar substance, used to seal letters; A thin disk of silicon or other semiconductor on which an electronic circuit is produced
  8. (Wafers) Thin cakes (Exo 16:31; Exo 29:2, Exo 29:23; Lev 2:4; Lev 7:12; Lev 8:26; Num 6:15, Num 6:19) used in various offerings.
  9. (Wafers) fibrous materials compressed into a form having a cross-section measurement greater than its length. Exact dimensions and bulk density of wafered feeds will vary according to the processing equipment used.
  10. A thin sheet of semiconductor (photovoltaic material) made by cutting it from a single crystal or ingot.
  11. Wafer, if seen in a dream, purports an encounter with enemies. To eat one, suggests impoverished fortune. For a young woman to bake them, denotes that she will be tormented and distressed by fears of remaining in the unmarried state.
  12. The substrate made usually from semiconductor material, such as silicon, that is used as the foundation to build IC's on
  13. A wafer is akin to a pin in a pin tumbler lock. They are found in wafer locks, which are the kind of locks you'll find on filing cabinets, desk drawers, display cases, cheap fire safes, and car locks. ...
  14. the bread part of the Lord's Supper; often an unleavened, thin cracker; sometimes the wafer is imprinted with a cross; some wafers are large, being several inches in diameter.
  15. thin wax disc, melted with a candle and used to seal a letter.
  16. Small, thin gold bars popular in the Middle East, South East Asia and Japan.
  17. Wafer is a piece of thin, round semiconductor material (typically silicon) which is used to make microchips. Typically, Silicon crystal is grown into a large cylindrical ingot, then sliced intovery thin wafers.
  18. Semiconductor processing is done on round disks of silicon called wafers. A current generation wafer is 8 inches in diameter, the thickness of a credit card, weighs about a third of a pound, and is polished to a mirror finish on one side. It is silvery gray in color.
  19. the glass substrate onto which probes are synthesized during the manufacturing of probe arrays.
  20. A generic term used to describe small gold bars, (usually less than 50 grams). So-called because they are thin and resemble a wafer biscuit.
  21. The approximately 1/30^th of an inch thick slices of the ingot (see chip) are called wafers. The manufacturing of semiconductors begins with a wafer, in the following processes transistors and other structures are defined and interconnected by conductors. ...
  22. A thin slice of semiconducting material, such as a silicon crystal, upon which microcircuits are constructed by diffusion and deposition of various materials. Note: Millions of individual circuit elements, constituting hundreds of microcircuits, may be constructed on a single wafer. ...
  23. Extremely thin slice of silicon up to 300 mm in diameter. Serves as the substrate material for integrated circuits (also known as chips).
  24. A thin disk of crystal semiconductor, usually silicon-based, upon which chips are fabricated.  Extremely thin (1/50^th of an inch) and usually only four or five inches in diameter.
  25. Thin slice of material suitable for batch processing. Normally circular with diameters in the 50-300 mm range.