Etymology: [ a[ng]-k&r ] (noun.) before 12th century. Old English ancor, from Latin ancora, from (or cognate with) Ancient Greek ἄγκυρα (ankura). The modern spelling is a sixteenth-century modification to better represent the Latin misspelling anchora.
An anchorman or anchorwoman, An HTML/XHTML mark-up tag to define a position in a file, or a link to a URL, A fixed point, especially materials or tools used to affix something at that point, Generic term to refer to the combined anchoring gear (anchor, rode, and fittings such as bitts, cat, and windlass.), To hold an object, especially a ship or a boat to a fixed point, A tool used to moor a vessel to the bottom of a sea or river to resist movement, To provide emotional stability for a person in distress, To perform as an anchorman, An anchoret, a mechanical device that prevents a vessel from moving a central cohesive source of support and stability; "faith is his anchor"; "the keystone of campaign reform was the ban on soft money"; "he is the linchpin of this firm", To cast anchor; to come to anchor; as, our ship (or the captain) anchored in the stream, a television reporter who coordinates a broadcast to which several correspondents contribute secure a vessel with an anchor; "We anchored at Baltimore", To stop; to fix or rest, A point occupied by two or more of a player's checkers on the opponent's side of the board An advanced anchor is an anchor on the opponent's four or five point or any anchor outside the opponent's home board, attach firmly, fasten tightly; drop an anchor (from a boat), An anchor describes the destination point in a document for a hyperlink Therefore anchors allow developers to direct users to particular parts of a document, In HTML, anchors mark the start and end of hypertext links, a highlighted section of hyperlinked text or a hyperlinked graphic which appears in a Web document and which, when clicked, causes the web browser to "jump" to the linked web site, fix firmly and stably; "anchor the lamppost in concrete, An emblem of hope, That which gives stability or security; that on which we place dependence for safety, Fig, Any instrument or contrivance serving a purpose like that of a ship's anchor, as an arrangement of timber to hold a dam fast; a contrivance to hold the end of a bridge cable, or other similar part; a contrivance used by founders to hold the core of a mold in place, A iron instrument which is attached to a ship by a cable (rope or chain), and which, being cast overboard, lays hold of the earth by a fluke or hook and thus retains the ship in a particular station, A wooden, stone or metal device that , when connected to a vessel with a cable or chain, was used to secure the vessel to the bed of a waterway to prevent if from drifting Anchors attach themselves to the lake bottom using flukes [IMAGE] [MOVIE], Carved work, somewhat resembling an anchor or arrowhead; a part of the ornaments of certain moldings, One of the anchor-shaped spicules of certain sponges; also, one of the calcareous spinules of certain Holothurians, as in species of Synapta, It is seen in the echinus, or egg-and- anchor (called also egg-and-dart, egg-and-tongue) ornament, A metal tie holding adjoining parts of a building together, To place at anchor; to secure by an anchor; as, to anchor a ship, To fix or fasten; to fix in a stable condition; as, to anchor the cables of a suspension bridge, a television reporter who coordinates a broadcast to which several correspondents contribute, a central cohesive source of support and stability; "faith is his anchor"; "the keystone of campaign reform was the ban on soft money"; "he is the linchpin of this firm", fix firmly and stably; "anchor the lamppost in concrete", secure a vessel with an anchor; "We anchored at Baltimore", Either the starting point or the destination of a hyperlink (or link) within a document Example: a highlighted word within an online help file may display additional information related to the word This information is "anchored" to the highlighted word, An anchor (also referred to as a bookmark by Microsoft applications) is the destination of a hyperlink within a Web page Anchors are common on single Web pages containing lots of text where the text section titles appear at the top of the page and clicking the link causes the browser to jump down the page and display the selected portion of text, a mechanical device that prevents a vessel from moving, If a boat is at anchor, it is floating in a particular place and is prevented from moving by its anchor, An anchor is a heavy hooked object that is dropped from a boat into the water at the end of a chain in order to make the boat stay in one place, heavy object placed in the water in order to hold boats in place; main broadcaster on a TV or radio program, broadcaster; source of security or stability, refuge; text used as the start or end of a hypertext link (Internet), When a boat anchors or when you anchor it, its anchor is dropped into the water in order to make it stay in one place. We could anchor off the pier They anchored the boat, If you anchor an object somewhere, you fix it to something to prevent it moving from that place. The roots anchor the plant in the earth The child seat belt was not properly anchored to the car. = tether, The anchor on a television or radio programme, especially a news programme, is the person who presents it. He worked in the news division of ABC -- he was the anchor of its 15-minute evening newscast, an imbedded link in one document which allows users to connect to another document, to another medium, or to another section of the same document, An anchor is an HTML "tag" that marks a specific point in an HTML document as either the source or destination of a hypertext link This allows you to create links from one hypertext document to another, as well as to different sections within the same document Anchors that point to different places in the same document use the <A NAME> tag and are frequently used to navigate a long document with many sections Anchors that point to other hypertext documents use the <A HREF> tag, The person who anchors a television or radio programme, especially a news programme, is the person who presents it and acts as a link between interviews and reports which come from other places or studios. Viewers saw him anchoring a five-minute summary of regional news. a series of cassettes on the Vietnam War, anchored by Mr. Cronkite, An anchor is an HTML tag that marks a specific point in an HTML document as either the source or destination of a hypertext link This allows you to create links from one hypertext document to another, as well as to different sections within the same document Anchors that point to different places in the same document use the <A NAME> tag and are frequently used to navigate a long document with many sections Anchors that point to other hypertext documents use the <A HREF> tag, An element that denotes a specific location in a document, pointed to by another anchor When the document is displayed in a browser, clicking on an anchor (of the first type) causes the browser to display the document and/or the location that it points to, Either the starting point or destination of a hyperlink The letters at the top of this page are all anchors - clicking one takes you to another part of this page FrontPage calls these bookmarks, A tag in HTML that marks the start and end of the object to be retrieved by the browser from a server, Synonymous with hyperlinks, anchor refers to non-linear links among documents Or more simply put, it's the word or phrase that can be selected to connect to another page or resource, A destination marker for a link, specifying a specific location on a Web page Anchors are often used to link to locations within a Web page Sometimes they are used to identify specific spots on other Web pages If you have a lot of text on a Web page, use an anchor to help your readers maneuver around the text, Hypertext Markup Language provides the a element to designate an anchor Anchors used as hyperlinks have a source and destination These are the "hotspot", clickable links, that are used for navigation In the following <a href="http://www bigbaer com">BIG BAER Urban Alternative</a>, the destination anchor is the URL "http://www bigbaer com" while the source anchor is the hyperlink BIG BAER Urban Alternative, An object on an HTML page has its position calculated with respect to the location of its anchor You can select the anchor to move the object, The area of a hypertext document that is either the source or destination of a hypertext link The link might extend from that area to another document or from another document to that area When anchors are the starting points of these links, they are typically highlighted or otherwise identified in the hypertext browser, Last man to roll in team competition Usually the best bowler; i e , the bowler most likely to get a strike in the "foundation frame" (the ninth frame) and most likely to "strike out " The term originated in 1913 when a bowler (Hans Arfsparger) for the Anchor Brewing team in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, bowled in the fifth position and struck out 94 times in succession, CDE Certification Checklist: A position in a collection of selectable objects that marks one end point of an extended selection range (Definition from Motif 1 2 Style Guide ), An invisible name on a page marking a particular spot It takes the form: <A NAME="[anchor_name]"> </A> A hyperlink to http://www somesite com/somepage html#[anchor_name] will go to that part of the desired page The source for this definition has <A NAME="anchor">Anchor</A> just above the definition Only the "Anchor" is visible, but the <A NAME="anchor"> and the </A> that surround it are not visible If you came to this definition via a hyperlink, that link ended with: /web_glossary html#anchor, Either the starting point or destination of a hyperlink The letters at the top of this page are all anchors Clicking on one takes you to another location on this page, The location of a hypertext link in a document An anchor can be either the start of a hypertext link or the destination of a hypertext link, HTML code that enables you to link to a specific location on a page We have included anchors throughout our site This definition, for example, has an anchor that looks like this, Present participle of anchor, The tendency of people to place subsequently refined answers to a given question close to the initially estimated answer, giving unduly weight to the initial answer, such as adjusting the initial estimate of "20%" to "30%" when "90%" would be more appropriate, Having the extremities turned back, like the flukes of an anchor; as, an anchored cross, Held by an anchor; at anchor; held safely; as, an anchored bark; also, shaped like an anchor; forked; as, an anchored tongue, attached firmly; ground; chained down, The de-nominalization of the process of stimulus response, A cognitive heuristic in which decisions are made based on an initial 'anchor', Point of decision in the process of reach-testing The cycle that includes an anchoring point follows the sequence: suggestion of an idea, agreement to the idea by others, presentation of examples to clarify the idea, and finally, affirmation, or confirmation, of the idea, The process of 'setting' an anchor Anchors can be created deliberately or by chance They can also be altered or 'dissolved', 'stacked' or 'collapsed' see Collapsing Anchors" and Stacking Anchors, A supplemental method of locking the thermal spray deposit to the substrate by screw heads, studs, or similar means, Applying a gesture, touch, or sound just before a state peaks, either in oneself or someone else, so that the anchored state can be re-activated by reapplying that gesture, touch or sound A smell can also be used as an anchor Eg as you remember the smell of a rose, you may find a memory of some experience that involved roses coming to mind Psychologists recognise the pattern of anchoring as stimulus response conditioning, The process by which any stimulus or representation (external or internal) gets connected to and so triggers a response Anchors occur naturally and in all representational systems They can be used intentionally, as in analogue marking or with numerous change techniques, such as Collapse Anchors The NLP concept of anchoring derives from the Pavlovian stimulus-response reaction, classical conditioning In Pavlov's study the tuning fork became the stimulus (anchor) that cued the dog to salivate, Tying a wall down to resist racking or lift Walls can be anchored to the ground using foundation bolts, straps, and special brackets, Associating or marking subjective states with simple patterns of behavior, such as gestures, tone of voice, etc Used to bring back states with a simple stimulus, A link to a specific location on a Web page Also called Bookmarks in some Web page editors, Special places that you can link to inside documents Links can then jump to those special places inside the page as opposed to jumping just to the top of the page, plural of anchor, Text or image links in a Web document that point to another resource, third-person singular of anchor, Anchors are used to mark specific locations within a document Once an anchor is placed in location, you can create a link to that spot, (Slang) brakes (of a car), the same as hyperlinks--the underlined words or phrases you click on in World Wide Web documents to jump to another part of the screen or page, The beginning and end markers of a link, links you to a certain point on a webpage, either the one you are currently viewing or another page within the same website This is useful when you have a lot of text for one page By categorizing the information on your page, you can create an outline at the top of your page and a user can click on the topic of choice which will take him/her to the desired point in the site,
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An anchorman or anchorwoman
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An HTML/XHTML mark-up tag to define a position in a file, or a link to a URL
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A fixed point, especially materials or tools used to affix something at that point
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Generic term to refer to the combined anchoring gear (anchor, rode, and fittings such as bitts, cat, and windlass.)
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To hold an object, especially a ship or a boat to a fixed point
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A tool used to moor a vessel to the bottom of a sea or river to resist movement - "nautical An iron device so shaped as to grip the bottom and hold a vessel at her berth by the chain or rope attached. (FM 55-501)."
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To provide emotional stability for a person in distress
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To perform as an anchorman
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An anchoret
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a mechanical device that prevents a vessel from moving a central cohesive source of support and stability; "faith is his anchor"; "the keystone of campaign reform was the ban on soft money"; "he is the linchpin of this firm"
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To cast anchor; to come to anchor; as, our ship (or the captain) anchored in the stream
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a television reporter who coordinates a broadcast to which several correspondents contribute secure a vessel with an anchor; "We anchored at Baltimore"
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To stop; to fix or rest
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A point occupied by two or more of a player's checkers on the opponent's side of the board An advanced anchor is an anchor on the opponent's four or five point or any anchor outside the opponent's home board
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attach firmly, fasten tightly; drop an anchor (from a boat) fiil
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An anchor describes the destination point in a document for a hyperlink Therefore anchors allow developers to direct users to particular parts of a document
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In HTML, anchors mark the start and end of hypertext links
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a highlighted section of hyperlinked text or a hyperlinked graphic which appears in a Web document and which, when clicked, causes the web browser to "jump" to the linked web site
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fix firmly and stably; "anchor the lamppost in concrete
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An emblem of hope
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That which gives stability or security; that on which we place dependence for safety
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Fig
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Any instrument or contrivance serving a purpose like that of a ship's anchor, as an arrangement of timber to hold a dam fast; a contrivance to hold the end of a bridge cable, or other similar part; a contrivance used by founders to hold the core of a mold in place
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A iron instrument which is attached to a ship by a cable (rope or chain), and which, being cast overboard, lays hold of the earth by a fluke or hook and thus retains the ship in a particular station
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A wooden, stone or metal device that , when connected to a vessel with a cable or chain, was used to secure the vessel to the bed of a waterway to prevent if from drifting Anchors attach themselves to the lake bottom using flukes [IMAGE] [MOVIE]
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Carved work, somewhat resembling an anchor or arrowhead; a part of the ornaments of certain moldings
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One of the anchor-shaped spicules of certain sponges; also, one of the calcareous spinules of certain Holothurians, as in species of Synapta
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It is seen in the echinus, or egg-and- anchor (called also egg-and-dart, egg-and-tongue) ornament
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A metal tie holding adjoining parts of a building together
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To place at anchor; to secure by an anchor; as, to anchor a ship
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To fix or fasten; to fix in a stable condition; as, to anchor the cables of a suspension bridge
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a television reporter who coordinates a broadcast to which several correspondents contribute
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a central cohesive source of support and stability; "faith is his anchor"; "the keystone of campaign reform was the ban on soft money"; "he is the linchpin of this firm"
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fix firmly and stably; "anchor the lamppost in concrete"
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secure a vessel with an anchor; "We anchored at Baltimore"
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Either the starting point or the destination of a hyperlink (or link) within a document Example: a highlighted word within an online help file may display additional information related to the word This information is "anchored" to the highlighted word
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An anchor (also referred to as a bookmark by Microsoft applications) is the destination of a hyperlink within a Web page Anchors are common on single Web pages containing lots of text where the text section titles appear at the top of the page and clicking the link causes the browser to jump down the page and display the selected portion of text
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a mechanical device that prevents a vessel from moving
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If a boat is at anchor, it is floating in a particular place and is prevented from moving by its anchor
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An anchor is a heavy hooked object that is dropped from a boat into the water at the end of a chain in order to make the boat stay in one place
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heavy object placed in the water in order to hold boats in place; main broadcaster on a TV or radio program, broadcaster; source of security or stability, refuge; text used as the start or end of a hypertext link (Internet) isim
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When a boat anchors or when you anchor it, its anchor is dropped into the water in order to make it stay in one place. We could anchor off the pier They anchored the boat
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If you anchor an object somewhere, you fix it to something to prevent it moving from that place. The roots anchor the plant in the earth The child seat belt was not properly anchored to the car. = tether
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The anchor on a television or radio programme, especially a news programme, is the person who presents it. He worked in the news division of ABC -- he was the anchor of its 15-minute evening newscast
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an imbedded link in one document which allows users to connect to another document, to another medium, or to another section of the same document
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An anchor is an HTML "tag" that marks a specific point in an HTML document as either the source or destination of a hypertext link This allows you to create links from one hypertext document to another, as well as to different sections within the same document Anchors that point to different places in the same document use the <A NAME> tag and are frequently used to navigate a long document with many sections Anchors that point to other hypertext documents use the <A HREF> tag
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The person who anchors a television or radio programme, especially a news programme, is the person who presents it and acts as a link between interviews and reports which come from other places or studios. Viewers saw him anchoring a five-minute summary of regional news. a series of cassettes on the Vietnam War, anchored by Mr. Cronkite
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An anchor is an HTML tag that marks a specific point in an HTML document as either the source or destination of a hypertext link This allows you to create links from one hypertext document to another, as well as to different sections within the same document Anchors that point to different places in the same document use the <A NAME> tag and are frequently used to navigate a long document with many sections Anchors that point to other hypertext documents use the <A HREF> tag
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An element that denotes a specific location in a document, pointed to by another anchor When the document is displayed in a browser, clicking on an anchor (of the first type) causes the browser to display the document and/or the location that it points to
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Either the starting point or destination of a hyperlink The letters at the top of this page are all anchors - clicking one takes you to another part of this page FrontPage calls these bookmarks
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A tag in HTML that marks the start and end of the object to be retrieved by the browser from a server
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Synonymous with hyperlinks, anchor refers to non-linear links among documents Or more simply put, it's the word or phrase that can be selected to connect to another page or resource
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A destination marker for a link, specifying a specific location on a Web page Anchors are often used to link to locations within a Web page Sometimes they are used to identify specific spots on other Web pages If you have a lot of text on a Web page, use an anchor to help your readers maneuver around the text
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Hypertext Markup Language provides the a element to designate an anchor Anchors used as hyperlinks have a source and destination These are the "hotspot", clickable links, that are used for navigation In the following <a href="http://www bigbaer com">BIG BAER Urban Alternative</a>, the destination anchor is the URL "http://www bigbaer com" while the source anchor is the hyperlink BIG BAER Urban Alternative
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An object on an HTML page has its position calculated with respect to the location of its anchor You can select the anchor to move the object
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The area of a hypertext document that is either the source or destination of a hypertext link The link might extend from that area to another document or from another document to that area When anchors are the starting points of these links, they are typically highlighted or otherwise identified in the hypertext browser
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Last man to roll in team competition Usually the best bowler; i e , the bowler most likely to get a strike in the "foundation frame" (the ninth frame) and most likely to "strike out " The term originated in 1913 when a bowler (Hans Arfsparger) for the Anchor Brewing team in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, bowled in the fifth position and struck out 94 times in succession
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CDE Certification Checklist: A position in a collection of selectable objects that marks one end point of an extended selection range (Definition from Motif 1 2 Style Guide )
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An invisible name on a page marking a particular spot It takes the form: <A NAME="[anchor_name]"> </A> A hyperlink to http://www somesite com/somepage html#[anchor_name] will go to that part of the desired page The source for this definition has <A NAME="anchor">Anchor</A> just above the definition Only the "Anchor" is visible, but the <A NAME="anchor"> and the </A> that surround it are not visible If you came to this definition via a hyperlink, that link ended with: /web_glossary html#anchor
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Either the starting point or destination of a hyperlink The letters at the top of this page are all anchors Clicking on one takes you to another location on this page
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The location of a hypertext link in a document An anchor can be either the start of a hypertext link or the destination of a hypertext link
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HTML code that enables you to link to a specific location on a page We have included anchors throughout our site This definition, for example, has an anchor that looks like this
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anchoring
Present participle of anchor
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anchoring
The tendency of people to place subsequently refined answers to a given question close to the initially estimated answer, giving unduly weight to the initial answer, such as adjusting the initial estimate of "20%" to "30%" when "90%" would be more appropriate
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anchored
Having the extremities turned back, like the flukes of an anchor; as, an anchored cross
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anchored
Held by an anchor; at anchor; held safely; as, an anchored bark; also, shaped like an anchor; forked; as, an anchored tongue
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anchored
attached firmly; ground; chained down sıfat
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anchoring
The de-nominalization of the process of stimulus response
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anchoring
A cognitive heuristic in which decisions are made based on an initial 'anchor'
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anchoring
Point of decision in the process of reach-testing The cycle that includes an anchoring point follows the sequence: suggestion of an idea, agreement to the idea by others, presentation of examples to clarify the idea, and finally, affirmation, or confirmation, of the idea
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anchoring
The process of 'setting' an anchor Anchors can be created deliberately or by chance They can also be altered or 'dissolved', 'stacked' or 'collapsed' see Collapsing Anchors" and Stacking Anchors
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anchoring
A supplemental method of locking the thermal spray deposit to the substrate by screw heads, studs, or similar means
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anchoring
Applying a gesture, touch, or sound just before a state peaks, either in oneself or someone else, so that the anchored state can be re-activated by reapplying that gesture, touch or sound A smell can also be used as an anchor Eg as you remember the smell of a rose, you may find a memory of some experience that involved roses coming to mind Psychologists recognise the pattern of anchoring as stimulus response conditioning
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anchoring
The process by which any stimulus or representation (external or internal) gets connected to and so triggers a response Anchors occur naturally and in all representational systems They can be used intentionally, as in analogue marking or with numerous change techniques, such as Collapse Anchors The NLP concept of anchoring derives from the Pavlovian stimulus-response reaction, classical conditioning In Pavlov's study the tuning fork became the stimulus (anchor) that cued the dog to salivate
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anchoring
Tying a wall down to resist racking or lift Walls can be anchored to the ground using foundation bolts, straps, and special brackets
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anchoring
Associating or marking subjective states with simple patterns of behavior, such as gestures, tone of voice, etc Used to bring back states with a simple stimulus
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anchors
A link to a specific location on a Web page Also called Bookmarks in some Web page editors
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anchors
Special places that you can link to inside documents Links can then jump to those special places inside the page as opposed to jumping just to the top of the page
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anchors
plural of anchor
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anchors
Text or image links in a Web document that point to another resource
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anchors
third-person singular of anchor
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anchors
Anchors are used to mark specific locations within a document Once an anchor is placed in location, you can create a link to that spot
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anchors
(Slang) brakes (of a car) isim
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anchors
the same as hyperlinks--the underlined words or phrases you click on in World Wide Web documents to jump to another part of the screen or page
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anchors
The beginning and end markers of a link
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anchors
links you to a certain point on a webpage, either the one you are currently viewing or another page within the same website This is useful when you have a lot of text for one page By categorizing the information on your page, you can create an outline at the top of your page and a user can click on the topic of choice which will take him/her to the desired point in the site
Some etymologies, pronunciations, function and usage date content for the English translation portion are from Merriam-Webster Online at www.Merriam-Webster.com. Thanks to Online Yunanca Dil Eğitimi for providing some parts of online greek dictionary. To contribute more resources please contact us. Visuals(images) are provided by Google Image Search API. Some parts of the dictionary is contributed by many users, thank you! The content on this site is for informational purposes only. Bu aramada anchor kelimesinin sözlük anlamı ve eşanlamı nedir, nasıl okunur hakkında bilgi verilmektedir. anchor kelimesinin etimolojik ve eşanlamları ile ilgili açıklamalar ve bilgiler eksiksiz ve hatasız olarak anılmamalıdır. Burada yer alan anchor kelimesi ile ilgili tüm açıklamalar bilgi amaçlıdır. Eksik ve hatalı çevirileri lütfen bildiriniz.