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encode
[en-kohd]
encode
/ ɪnˈkəʊd /
verb
to convert (a message) from plain text into code
computing to convert (characters and symbols) into a digital form as a series of impulses Compare decode
to convert (an electrical signal) into a form suitable for transmission
to convert (a nerve signal) into a form that can be received by the brain
to use (a word, phrase, etc, esp of a foreign language) in the construction appropriate to it in that language
encode
To specify the genetic code for the synthesis of a protein molecule or a part of a protein molecule.
Other Word Forms
- encodement noun
- encoder noun
- encodable adjective
- misencode verb (used with object)
Example Sentences
A number of adversaries who stole material encoded by cryptography were then able to regain ongoing access to the victims' SharePoint data, he said.
Greenberg, a native son of Long Island, encoded his social observations about the frenzied real estate hierarchy in comic language that rarely if ever missed its mark.
This suggests that the reason we don’t remember our earliest years is related to how they are encoded in the brain.
Concepts in the human brain, as we've seen, can be encoded with just a small number of neurons firing, or even just one.
This is in contrast to everything that is known about how memories are encoded in non-human animals, and it suggests that this might be a key adaptation behind human intelligence.
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