Associations to the word «Scan»
Noun
- Obstruction
- Electrode
- Peabody
- Concussion
- Artery
- Ion
- Iris
- Fourier
- Ionization
- Optics
- Cortex
- Paperwork
- Vantage
- Crowd
- Patient
- Tissue
- Menu
- Ppm
- Trauma
- Correlate
- Cancer
- Test
- Spacing
- Angle
- Localization
- Mag
- Diffraction
- Password
- Shoreline
- Jun
- Vulnerability
- Schizophrenia
- Pausing
- Bandwidth
- Dose
- Bladder
- Panorama
- Chest
- Khz
- Sulu
- Polarization
- Tc
- Mummy
- Tracker
- Leukemia
- Bile
- Archive
- Procedure
- Tab
- Marrow
- Injection
- Gale
- Rpm
- Flashlight
- Bleeding
- Bowel
- Duct
Adjective
Wiktionary
SCAN, verb. To examine sequentially, part by part.
SCAN, verb. (computing) To create a digital copy of an image using a scanner.
SCAN, verb. To look about for.
SCAN, verb. (poetry) To fit or conform to a specific meter.
SCAN, verb. (obsolete) To mount by steps; to go through with step by step.
SCAN, noun. An instance of scanning.
SCAN, noun. The result or output of a scanning process.
SCAN LINE, noun. (electronics) One of the horizontal lines that compose a raster scanning pattern, as on a television or computer display.
SCAN LINE, noun. (computing) A single row of pixels in a raster graphics image.
SCAN LINES, noun. Plural of scan line
Dictionary definition
SCAN, noun. The act of scanning; systematic examination of a prescribed region; "he made a thorough scan of the beach with his binoculars".
SCAN, noun. An image produced by scanning; "he analyzed the brain scan"; "you could see the tumor in the CAT scan".
SCAN, verb. Examine minutely or intensely; "the surgeon scanned the X-ray".
SCAN, verb. Examine hastily; "She scanned the newspaper headlines while waiting for the taxi".
SCAN, verb. Make a wide, sweeping search of; "The beams scanned the night sky".
SCAN, verb. Conform to a metrical pattern.
SCAN, verb. Move a light beam over; in electronics, to reproduce an image.
SCAN, verb. Read metrically; "scan verses".
SCAN, verb. Obtain data from magnetic tapes; "This dictionary can be read by the computer".
Wise words
The most valuable of all talents is that of never using two
words when one will do.