Etymology: [ 'chip ] (noun.) 14th century. Middle English chip from Old English ċipp "log, beam, small piece of wood" from Proto-Germanic *kip(p)az (“log, beam”). Akin to Old Saxon kip "post", Old High German kipfa, chipfa "axle, stave", Old Norse keppr "cudgel, club".
Synonyms: flake, IC, integrated circuit, silicon chip, crisp, fries, French fry, freedom fries, punnet, British English, New Zealand, pottle, dent, fragment, gobbet, nick, notch, paring, part
A diminutive of the male given names Christopher and Charles, To break into small pieces, A receptacle, usually for strawberries or other fruit, To break small pieces from, to upgrade an engine management system, usually to increase power, To fit (an animal) with a microchip, Often with "in", to ante (up), To become chipped, A dried piece of dung used as fuel, A takeout that hits a rock at an angle, A damaged area of a surface where a chip has been broken off, A small piece broken from a larger piece of solid material, A token used in place of cash in gambling, A circuit fabricated in one piece on a small, thin substrate, A fried strip of potato of square or rectangular cross-section, similar to French fries, A thin, crisp, baked piece of vegetable, usually potato, A shot where the ball goes more upwards than a regular shot, To play a shot where the ball goes predominately upwards rather than forwards, A male given name, To cut small pieces from; to diminish or reduce to shape, by cutting away a little at a time; to hew, small piece; splinter; game token;(British) French fry; piece of food thinly sliced and fried; microchip, tiny square of semiconducting material containing miniature transistors and other electronic components (Electronics), To break or crack, or crack off a portion of, as of an eggshell in hatching, or a piece of crockery, A chip is a small piece of something or a small piece which has been broken off something. It contains real chocolate chips Teichler's eyes gleamed like chips of blue glass, A silicon chip is a very small piece of silicon with electronic circuits on it which is part of a computer or other piece of machinery, A chip in something such as a piece of china or furniture is where a small piece has been broken off it. The washbasin had a small chip, If you chip something or if it chips, a small piece is broken off it. The blow chipped the woman's tooth Steel baths are lighter but chip easily. + chipped chipped They drank out of chipped mugs, In discussions between people or governments, a chip or a bargaining chip is something of value which one side holds, which can be exchanged for something they want from the other side. The information could be used as a bargaining chip to extract some parallel information from Britain see also blue chip, Chips are plastic counters used in gambling to represent money. He put the pile of chips in the center of the table and drew a card, Chips or potato chips are very thin slices of fried potato that are eaten cold as a snack. a package of onion-flavored potato chips, Chips are long, thin pieces of potato fried in oil or fat and eaten hot, usually with a meal. I had fish and chips in a cafe, Poker chips are small round discs used instead of money at the poker table The ones used at casinos are typically made of clay, while home poker games often substitute cheaper plastic chips Using chips instead of cash has a number of advantages, mostly just that they're easier to count and manipulate Color designations for chips are arbitrary, but many casinos use white for $1 chips, red for $5 chips, green for $25 chips, and black for $100 chips If someone asks for a rack of white, they'd like $100 in $1 chips, Also called a die Popular term describing a small piece of silicon that contains a complete discrete component or an integrated circuit Many chips are made on a single wafer, then separated into dice (plural of die) and packaged individually, A tiny piece of semiconductor material containing electronic elements such as transistors A typical chip is made of silicon, is less than 0 25 square inches, and can contain millions of microscopic components Same as "Integrated Circuit" See also: Chip (Webopedia), Silicon chip or intergrated circuit used in a PC and its components A processor is a chip, cut a fragment from, flake; be broken off in small pieces; sculpt, engrave, Short for integrated circuit chip, a collection of interconnected microminiature electronic components, If you describe someone as a chip off the old block, you mean that they are just like one of their parents in character or behaviour. Her fifth child was born, a son who Sally at first thought was another chip off the old block, If you say that something happens when the chips are down, you mean it happens when a situation gets very difficult. When the chips are down, she's very tough, a thin crisp slice of potato fried in deep fat, a piece of dried bovine dung, a mark left after a small piece has been chopped or broken off of something, a small disk-shaped counter used to represent money when gambling, a low running approach shot, electronic equipment consisting of a small crystal of a silicon semiconductor fabricated to carry out a number of electronic functions in an integrated circuit, a triangular wooden float attached to the end of a log line, a small fragment of something broken off from the whole; "a bit of rock caught him in the eye", (1) (n ) A small piece of silicon bearing the equivalent of a large number of electrical components (2) (n ) An integrated circuit (IC), To bet, as with chips in the game of poker, break a small piece off from; "chip the glass"; "chip a tooth", cut a nick into, If you say that someone has a chip on their shoulder, you think that they feel inferior or that they believe they have been treated unfairly. He had this chip on his shoulder about my mum and dad thinking that they're better than him. To cheep, as a bird.chip n. A trick method of throwing one's opponent in wrestling, Another term for an integrated circuit, microchip or semiconductor, in the context of CDMA is distinct from bit and refers to binary digits transmitted over the RF link The chip rate in IS-95 is 1 2288 MHz (thus allowing adequate guard bands to permit the carriers to be spaced 1 25 MHz apart) Each bit is represented by many chips, and if a majority of the chips get through then the bit can be reconstructed properly The number of chips representing each bit varies depending on the bit rate When using an 8K Vocoder (such as EVRC) there are 128 chips for each bit Chips as such don't contain data because both the sender and receiver know the spreading pattern used to create them from a bit, and as such are not directly subject to the laws of Information Theory Though there are many phones simultaneously using a single frequency to transmit full chiprate, that means that the channel is not saturated unless the bitrate approaches the bandwidth of the carrier, break off (a piece from a whole); "Her tooth chipped", the act of chipping something a low running approach shot electronic equipment consisting of a small crystal of a silicon semiconductor fabricated to carry out a number of electronic functions in an integrated circuit a small disk-shaped counter used to represent money when gambling a triangular wooden float attached to the end of a log line a thin crisp slice of potato fried in deep fat a piece of dried bovine dung break a small piece off from; "chip the glass"; "chip a tooth", form by chipping; "They chipped their names in the stone", play a chip shot, The most essential electronic component of a computer: a tiny piece of silicon with an electronic circuit embedded in it, Commonly used to refer to integrated circuits used as components in computers, telephone systems, etc In actuality, it is the physical structure upon which the integrated circuits are fabricated, The triangular piece of wood attached to the log line, One of the counters used in poker and other games, To break or fly off in small pieces, A piece of wood, stone, or other substance, separated by an ax, chisel, or cutting instrument, Anything dried up, withered, or without flavor; used contemptuously, Wood or Cuban palm leaf split into slips, or straw plaited in a special manner, for making hats or bonnets, A fragment or piece broken off; a small piece, Integrated circuit that carries card intelligence Embedded in the plastic surface of a card and hidden by the communication contacts (1996, Schlumberger), Integrated circuit that carries card intelligence Embedded in plastic surface of card and hidden by contacts of gold or silver, 1) A slang term with the same meaning as the term IC (a miniature circuit of many components that is in small, sealed housing with prongs to connect it into equipment) 2) The thread cut away from the master lacquer to make the groove, while disc recording, A chip is an image subset window and is used in the correlation process, An electronic component that contains an electronic circuit and is manufactured from semiconductive material A customized chip is sometimes called an option, An electronic component consisting of thousands of transistors forming an integrated circuit capable of storing and processing large amounts of information; a building block of the computer's circuitry and computational functioning, An integrated circuit (e g for use in a payment card), A small square of thin semiconductor material, such as silicon, that has been chemically processed to have a specific set of electrical characteristics such as circuits storage, and/or logic elements, A tiny circuit board etched on a small square of sandlike material called silicon, Also called an "Integrated Circuit" or "IC" It is a tiny semiconductor that consists of interconnected transistors and other components They are constructed on a rectangle cut from a silicon wafer As integrated circuit technology developed, more and more transistors were packed in The ability to create a microprocessor on a single chip allowed for the development of small, inexpensive computers, The individual circuit or component of a silicon wafer The leadless form of an electronic component part, either passive or active, discrete or integrated, The uncased and normally leadless form of an electronic component part, either passive or active, discrete or integrated Also referred to as a die, An alternative name for an integrated circuit, Also called a die Popular term describing a section of a wafer that contains a discrete component or an integrated circuit Many chips are made on a single wafer, then separated into dice and packaged individually, A very small square of semi-conducting material Also known as a "die," it is the "active" light-emitting component of an LED, the act of chipping something, having a chip (small piece) or chips missing, having had the engine management system upgraded, usually to increase power, Simple past tense and past participle of chip, A fragment broken off of a larger material, The act of breaking something into small fragments, or of removing fragments from pottery etc, Present participle of chip, plural form of chip, The common term for tokens, issued by a casino in place of money, and having the equivalent of cash, Clearing House Interbank Payments System (New York), Small pieces of silicon on which are formed the basic electronic components that make up the various parts of a computer 2, p6, A ship's carpenter, potato chips; money (Slang), Thin-sliced and deep-fried potatoes sold in sealed bags; potato chips, nacho chips, etc, french fried potatoes; french fries, Potatoes cut into long thin pieces and fried in deep oil, plural of chip, The New York clearing house's computerized "Clearing House Interbank Payments System " Most Euro transactions are cleared and settled through CHIPS rather than over the FED wire, Clearing House Interbank Payments System, French fries, (wafers) (1) factory formed substrate on which electronic circuits are printed, usually a formulation including alumina, with high heat resistance; (2) a fingernail-sized "chip" of silicon that carries the circuitry for a computer; can have the equivalent of several thousand transistors and other electronic components, Woody material cut into short, thin wafers Chips are used as a raw material for pulping and fiberboard or as biomass fuel, A casino term for tokens used instead for money, Wood material cut into short, thin slices Chips are used as a raw material in pulp and fiberboard or as biomass fuel, A depression on the glass surface of tubing or rod caused by flaking of the glass, past of chip, Small flakes or tears to the edge(s) of a dust jacket, pages or spine of a book, having a small piece broken off; "a chipped tooth", something that is chipped has a small piece broken off the edge of it, Small nicks or cuts, usually used in the description of a dust-wrapper, A condition in which small pieces of the dust jacket have been chipped away at the edges, Tiny tears on the edge of a dust jacket, A book with a cover of any type, or a periodical that has a cover other than its published wraps, Stone: Objects made by controlled flaking of raw materials like chert Percussion flaking with a hammer stone or antler baton is used to rough out tools Pressure flaking with an antler, bone, or copper tip produces a refined appearance and fine edges, having a small piece broken off; "a chipped tooth, To manufacture a hold on natural rock by using a chisel and hammer to break off pieces of the rock A taboo and unforgivable offense perpetrated by short-sighted climbers who are incapable of ascending the route without destroying it Many routes chipped in previous years because they were deemed "impossible" without manufacturing holds, would have been within the climbing range of those currently pushing the limits of technical expertise had the routes been left as they were, (n ) the act of altering the rock by breaking it Almost universally shunned by climbers, but still performed by those whose bodies and egos are too weak to meet the challenge of a climb, Occasional or intermittent use of drugs to try to get clean, n the act of altering the rock by breaking it Almost universally shunned by climbers, but still performed by those whose bodies and egos are too weak to meet the challenge of a climb, The detaching of a small stone fragment from a larger piece in the process of tool manufacturing or use, A chip; a piece separated by a cutting or graving instrument; a fragment, The act or process of cutting or breaking off small pieces, as in dressing iron with a chisel, or reducing a timber or block of stone to shape, The breakdown at a cutting lip or margin by loss of fragments broken away during the cutting action, Using narcotic irregularly for pleasure; this stage often precedes one of physical dependency, The breaking off in small pieces of the edges of potter's ware, porcelain, etc, Small pieces of paint removed from the surface, typically a sign of physical damage incurred in shipping or handling use of a surface tolerant primer for touch up followed by the same finish coat generally solves the problem, Separation of paint from previous coats in chips or flakes, A method for removing seams and surface defects with chisel or gouge so that such defects will not be working into the finished product Chipping is often employed to remove metal that is excessive but not defective Removal of defects by gas cutting is known as "deseaming" or "scarfing ", The process of moving from one chip to another in a spread spectrum transmission process, each chip being representative of a different spectral component or tone in the spread spectrum band See also Frequency Hopping Spread Spectrum, The reduction of woody residue by a portable chipper to chips that are left to decay on the forest floor, The removal of paint from a substrate by means of impact of sharp stones etc, Miniaturized microprocessors built on a single piece of silicon [Typically, less than 1/2-inch square, they contain all the essential elements of a central processor, including the control logic, instruction decoding and arithmetic processing circuitry Microprocessor chips are combined with memory and I/O integrated circuit chips to form a microcomputer, which usually fill no more than a single printed circuit board ], Although some misguided persons believe that these are in some way related to potatoes, generic they are in fact a completely different foodstuff These form the staple diet of many a Wadham student - in fact if you neglect to ask for any food at the serving hatch you get chips by default Although difficult, it is in fact possible to go a whole day without eating chips from the Wadham canteen, Wood chips produced by a chipper; used to produce pulp, fibreboard and particleboard, and also as fuel, Unpackaged diodes, bipolar transistors, SCRs, TRIACs, and field-effect transistors (FETs) - also called DICE, the product of a primary manufacturing process where trees and parts of trees are converted into chips or small pieces of wood, to be used to make paper products and building supplies, Clearing House Inter-Bank Payment System, a computerized network for transfer of international dollar payments The CHIPS system links 115 depository institutions having offices in New York City,
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A diminutive of the male given names Christopher and Charles - ""All Cs," I said. "Sounds like they like order.""
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To break into small pieces - "The workers chipped the dead branches into mulch."
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A receptacle, usually for strawberries or other fruit
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To break small pieces from - "Be careful not to chip the paint."
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to upgrade an engine management system, usually to increase power
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To fit (an animal) with a microchip
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Often with "in", to ante (up)
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To become chipped - "This varnish chips easily."
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A dried piece of dung used as fuel
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A takeout that hits a rock at an angle
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A damaged area of a surface where a chip has been broken off - "This cup has a chip in it."
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A small piece broken from a larger piece of solid material
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A token used in place of cash in gambling
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A circuit fabricated in one piece on a small, thin substrate
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A fried strip of potato of square or rectangular cross-section, similar to French fries
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A thin, crisp, baked piece of vegetable, usually potato - "tortilla chips"
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A shot where the ball goes more upwards than a regular shot
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To play a shot where the ball goes predominately upwards rather than forwards
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A male given name
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To cut small pieces from; to diminish or reduce to shape, by cutting away a little at a time; to hew
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small piece; splinter; game token;(British) French fry; piece of food thinly sliced and fried; microchip, tiny square of semiconducting material containing miniature transistors and other electronic components (Electronics) isim
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To break or crack, or crack off a portion of, as of an eggshell in hatching, or a piece of crockery
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A chip is a small piece of something or a small piece which has been broken off something. It contains real chocolate chips Teichler's eyes gleamed like chips of blue glass
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A silicon chip is a very small piece of silicon with electronic circuits on it which is part of a computer or other piece of machinery
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A chip in something such as a piece of china or furniture is where a small piece has been broken off it. The washbasin had a small chip
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If you chip something or if it chips, a small piece is broken off it. The blow chipped the woman's tooth Steel baths are lighter but chip easily. + chipped chipped They drank out of chipped mugs
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In discussions between people or governments, a chip or a bargaining chip is something of value which one side holds, which can be exchanged for something they want from the other side. The information could be used as a bargaining chip to extract some parallel information from Britain see also blue chip
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Chips are plastic counters used in gambling to represent money. He put the pile of chips in the center of the table and drew a card
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Chips or potato chips are very thin slices of fried potato that are eaten cold as a snack. a package of onion-flavored potato chips
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Chips are long, thin pieces of potato fried in oil or fat and eaten hot, usually with a meal. I had fish and chips in a cafe
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Poker chips are small round discs used instead of money at the poker table The ones used at casinos are typically made of clay, while home poker games often substitute cheaper plastic chips Using chips instead of cash has a number of advantages, mostly just that they're easier to count and manipulate Color designations for chips are arbitrary, but many casinos use white for $1 chips, red for $5 chips, green for $25 chips, and black for $100 chips If someone asks for a rack of white, they'd like $100 in $1 chips
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Also called a die Popular term describing a small piece of silicon that contains a complete discrete component or an integrated circuit Many chips are made on a single wafer, then separated into dice (plural of die) and packaged individually
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A tiny piece of semiconductor material containing electronic elements such as transistors A typical chip is made of silicon, is less than 0 25 square inches, and can contain millions of microscopic components Same as "Integrated Circuit" See also: Chip (Webopedia)
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Silicon chip or intergrated circuit used in a PC and its components A processor is a chip
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cut a fragment from, flake; be broken off in small pieces; sculpt, engrave fiil
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Short for integrated circuit chip, a collection of interconnected microminiature electronic components
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If you describe someone as a chip off the old block, you mean that they are just like one of their parents in character or behaviour. Her fifth child was born, a son who Sally at first thought was another chip off the old block
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If you say that something happens when the chips are down, you mean it happens when a situation gets very difficult. When the chips are down, she's very tough
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a thin crisp slice of potato fried in deep fat
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a piece of dried bovine dung
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a mark left after a small piece has been chopped or broken off of something
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a small disk-shaped counter used to represent money when gambling
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a low running approach shot
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electronic equipment consisting of a small crystal of a silicon semiconductor fabricated to carry out a number of electronic functions in an integrated circuit
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a triangular wooden float attached to the end of a log line
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a small fragment of something broken off from the whole; "a bit of rock caught him in the eye"
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(1) (n ) A small piece of silicon bearing the equivalent of a large number of electrical components (2) (n ) An integrated circuit (IC)
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To bet, as with chips in the game of poker
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break a small piece off from; "chip the glass"; "chip a tooth"
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cut a nick into
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If you say that someone has a chip on their shoulder, you think that they feel inferior or that they believe they have been treated unfairly. He had this chip on his shoulder about my mum and dad thinking that they're better than him. To cheep, as a bird.chip n. A trick method of throwing one's opponent in wrestling
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Another term for an integrated circuit, microchip or semiconductor
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in the context of CDMA is distinct from bit and refers to binary digits transmitted over the RF link The chip rate in IS-95 is 1 2288 MHz (thus allowing adequate guard bands to permit the carriers to be spaced 1 25 MHz apart) Each bit is represented by many chips, and if a majority of the chips get through then the bit can be reconstructed properly The number of chips representing each bit varies depending on the bit rate When using an 8K Vocoder (such as EVRC) there are 128 chips for each bit Chips as such don't contain data because both the sender and receiver know the spreading pattern used to create them from a bit, and as such are not directly subject to the laws of Information Theory Though there are many phones simultaneously using a single frequency to transmit full chiprate, that means that the channel is not saturated unless the bitrate approaches the bandwidth of the carrier
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break off (a piece from a whole); "Her tooth chipped"
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the act of chipping something a low running approach shot electronic equipment consisting of a small crystal of a silicon semiconductor fabricated to carry out a number of electronic functions in an integrated circuit a small disk-shaped counter used to represent money when gambling a triangular wooden float attached to the end of a log line a thin crisp slice of potato fried in deep fat a piece of dried bovine dung break a small piece off from; "chip the glass"; "chip a tooth"
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form by chipping; "They chipped their names in the stone"
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play a chip shot
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The most essential electronic component of a computer: a tiny piece of silicon with an electronic circuit embedded in it
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Commonly used to refer to integrated circuits used as components in computers, telephone systems, etc In actuality, it is the physical structure upon which the integrated circuits are fabricated
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The triangular piece of wood attached to the log line
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One of the counters used in poker and other games
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To break or fly off in small pieces
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A piece of wood, stone, or other substance, separated by an ax, chisel, or cutting instrument
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Anything dried up, withered, or without flavor; used contemptuously
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Wood or Cuban palm leaf split into slips, or straw plaited in a special manner, for making hats or bonnets
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A fragment or piece broken off; a small piece
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Integrated circuit that carries card intelligence Embedded in the plastic surface of a card and hidden by the communication contacts (1996, Schlumberger)
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Integrated circuit that carries card intelligence Embedded in plastic surface of card and hidden by contacts of gold or silver
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1) A slang term with the same meaning as the term IC (a miniature circuit of many components that is in small, sealed housing with prongs to connect it into equipment) 2) The thread cut away from the master lacquer to make the groove, while disc recording
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A chip is an image subset window and is used in the correlation process
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An electronic component that contains an electronic circuit and is manufactured from semiconductive material A customized chip is sometimes called an option
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An electronic component consisting of thousands of transistors forming an integrated circuit capable of storing and processing large amounts of information; a building block of the computer's circuitry and computational functioning
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An integrated circuit (e g for use in a payment card)
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A small square of thin semiconductor material, such as silicon, that has been chemically processed to have a specific set of electrical characteristics such as circuits storage, and/or logic elements
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A tiny circuit board etched on a small square of sandlike material called silicon
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Also called an "Integrated Circuit" or "IC" It is a tiny semiconductor that consists of interconnected transistors and other components They are constructed on a rectangle cut from a silicon wafer As integrated circuit technology developed, more and more transistors were packed in The ability to create a microprocessor on a single chip allowed for the development of small, inexpensive computers
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The individual circuit or component of a silicon wafer The leadless form of an electronic component part, either passive or active, discrete or integrated
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The uncased and normally leadless form of an electronic component part, either passive or active, discrete or integrated Also referred to as a die
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An alternative name for an integrated circuit
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Also called a die Popular term describing a section of a wafer that contains a discrete component or an integrated circuit Many chips are made on a single wafer, then separated into dice and packaged individually
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A very small square of semi-conducting material Also known as a "die," it is the "active" light-emitting component of an LED
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the act of chipping something
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chipped
having a chip (small piece) or chips missing - "a chipped plate"
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chipped
having had the engine management system upgraded, usually to increase power
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chipped
Simple past tense and past participle of chip
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chipping
A fragment broken off of a larger material
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chipping
The act of breaking something into small fragments, or of removing fragments from pottery etc
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chipping
Present participle of chip
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chips
plural form of chip - "Wow, look at the chips on that motherboard!"
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chips
The common term for tokens, issued by a casino in place of money, and having the equivalent of cash
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chips
Clearing House Interbank Payments System (New York)
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chips
Small pieces of silicon on which are formed the basic electronic components that make up the various parts of a computer 2, p6
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chips
A ship's carpenter
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chips
potato chips; money (Slang) isim
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chips
Thin-sliced and deep-fried potatoes sold in sealed bags; potato chips, nacho chips, etc
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chips
french fried potatoes; french fries
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chips
Potatoes cut into long thin pieces and fried in deep oil
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chips
plural of chip
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chips
The New York clearing house's computerized "Clearing House Interbank Payments System " Most Euro transactions are cleared and settled through CHIPS rather than over the FED wire
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chips
Clearing House Interbank Payments System
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chips
French fries
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chips
(wafers) (1) factory formed substrate on which electronic circuits are printed, usually a formulation including alumina, with high heat resistance; (2) a fingernail-sized "chip" of silicon that carries the circuitry for a computer; can have the equivalent of several thousand transistors and other electronic components
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chips
Woody material cut into short, thin wafers Chips are used as a raw material for pulping and fiberboard or as biomass fuel
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chips
A casino term for tokens used instead for money
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chips
Wood material cut into short, thin slices Chips are used as a raw material in pulp and fiberboard or as biomass fuel
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chips
A depression on the glass surface of tubing or rod caused by flaking of the glass
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chipped
past of chip
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chipped
Small flakes or tears to the edge(s) of a dust jacket, pages or spine of a book
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chipped
having a small piece broken off; "a chipped tooth"
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chipped
something that is chipped has a small piece broken off the edge of it
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chipped
Small nicks or cuts, usually used in the description of a dust-wrapper
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chipped
A condition in which small pieces of the dust jacket have been chipped away at the edges
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chipped
Tiny tears on the edge of a dust jacket
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chipped
A book with a cover of any type, or a periodical that has a cover other than its published wraps
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chipped
Stone: Objects made by controlled flaking of raw materials like chert Percussion flaking with a hammer stone or antler baton is used to rough out tools Pressure flaking with an antler, bone, or copper tip produces a refined appearance and fine edges
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chipped
having a small piece broken off; "a chipped tooth
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chipping
To manufacture a hold on natural rock by using a chisel and hammer to break off pieces of the rock A taboo and unforgivable offense perpetrated by short-sighted climbers who are incapable of ascending the route without destroying it Many routes chipped in previous years because they were deemed "impossible" without manufacturing holds, would have been within the climbing range of those currently pushing the limits of technical expertise had the routes been left as they were
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chipping
(n ) the act of altering the rock by breaking it Almost universally shunned by climbers, but still performed by those whose bodies and egos are too weak to meet the challenge of a climb
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chipping
Occasional or intermittent use of drugs to try to get clean
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chipping
n the act of altering the rock by breaking it Almost universally shunned by climbers, but still performed by those whose bodies and egos are too weak to meet the challenge of a climb
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chipping
The detaching of a small stone fragment from a larger piece in the process of tool manufacturing or use
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chipping
A chip; a piece separated by a cutting or graving instrument; a fragment
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chipping
The act or process of cutting or breaking off small pieces, as in dressing iron with a chisel, or reducing a timber or block of stone to shape
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chipping
The breakdown at a cutting lip or margin by loss of fragments broken away during the cutting action
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chipping
Using narcotic irregularly for pleasure; this stage often precedes one of physical dependency
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chipping
The breaking off in small pieces of the edges of potter's ware, porcelain, etc
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chipping
Small pieces of paint removed from the surface, typically a sign of physical damage incurred in shipping or handling use of a surface tolerant primer for touch up followed by the same finish coat generally solves the problem
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chipping
Separation of paint from previous coats in chips or flakes
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chipping
A method for removing seams and surface defects with chisel or gouge so that such defects will not be working into the finished product Chipping is often employed to remove metal that is excessive but not defective Removal of defects by gas cutting is known as "deseaming" or "scarfing "
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chipping
The process of moving from one chip to another in a spread spectrum transmission process, each chip being representative of a different spectral component or tone in the spread spectrum band See also Frequency Hopping Spread Spectrum
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chipping
The reduction of woody residue by a portable chipper to chips that are left to decay on the forest floor
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chipping
The removal of paint from a substrate by means of impact of sharp stones etc
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chips
Miniaturized microprocessors built on a single piece of silicon [Typically, less than 1/2-inch square, they contain all the essential elements of a central processor, including the control logic, instruction decoding and arithmetic processing circuitry Microprocessor chips are combined with memory and I/O integrated circuit chips to form a microcomputer, which usually fill no more than a single printed circuit board ]
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209
chips
Although some misguided persons believe that these are in some way related to potatoes, generic they are in fact a completely different foodstuff These form the staple diet of many a Wadham student - in fact if you neglect to ask for any food at the serving hatch you get chips by default Although difficult, it is in fact possible to go a whole day without eating chips from the Wadham canteen
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210
chips
Wood chips produced by a chipper; used to produce pulp, fibreboard and particleboard, and also as fuel
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211
chips
Unpackaged diodes, bipolar transistors, SCRs, TRIACs, and field-effect transistors (FETs) - also called DICE
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212
chips
the product of a primary manufacturing process where trees and parts of trees are converted into chips or small pieces of wood, to be used to make paper products and building supplies
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213
chips
Clearing House Inter-Bank Payment System, a computerized network for transfer of international dollar payments The CHIPS system links 115 depository institutions having offices in New York City
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 chip kelimesinin sözlük anlamı ve eşanlamı nedir, nasıl okunur hakkında bilgi verilmektedir. chip kelimesinin etimolojik ve eşanlamları ile ilgili açıklamalar ve bilgiler eksiksiz ve hatasız olarak anılmamalıdır. Burada yer alan chip kelimesi ile ilgili tüm açıklamalar bilgi amaçlıdır. Eksik ve hatalı çevirileri lütfen bildiriniz.