A mark left by something that has passed along; as, the track, or wake, of a ship; the track of a meteor; the track of a sled or a wheel
A track is a piece of ground, often oval-shaped, that is used for races involving athletes, cars, bicycles, horses, or dogs called greyhounds. The two men turned to watch the horses going round the track. the athletics track
To track someone or something means to follow their movements by means of a special device, such as a satellite or radar. Our radar began tracking the jets
One contiguous physical spiral area from inner diameter to outer diameter containing information (dual layer DVD discs have two physical tracks ) Or, the information contained within a single 360 ° rotation of the disc Or, one contiguous logical element of information, such as a single CD audio "song" or computer data region (one CD session contains from one up to 99 such logical tracks, each consisting of a pre-gap, user data, and a post-gap )
(n ) A concentric ring on a disk that passes under a single stationary disk head as the disk rotates
A strip of specified width and location running the length of the magnetic stripe on which data is encoded ANSI/ISO standards define three track locations for the magnetic stripe on credit/financial cards, called Track 1, 2 and 3; the tracks are 0 110" wide, with Track 1 closest to the card edge
A mark or impression left by the foot, either of man or beast; trace; vestige; footprint
A part of the audio tape that has one channel of audio recorded onto it It is in parallel with the length of the tape On a standard stereo audio cassette there are four tracks, two for each direction
If someone covers their tracks, they hide or destroy evidence of their identity or their actions, because they want to keep them secret. He covered his tracks, burnt letters and diaries
Railway tracks are the rails that a train travels along. A woman fell on to the tracks
If you keep track of a situation or a person, you make sure that you have the newest and most accurate information about them all the time. With eleven thousand employees, it's very difficult to keep track of them all
Verb: To be controlled by or follow in some proportional relationship (as when a filter's cutoff frequency tracks the keyboard, moving up or down depending on what note is played) Noun: One of a number of independent memory areas in o sequencer By analogy with tape tracks, sequencer tracks are normally longitudinal with respect to time and play back in sync with other tracks
If you say that someone has the inside track, you mean that they have an advantage, for example special knowledge about something. Denver has the inside track among 10 sites being considered
şop
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() Middle English soppe, from Old English sopp 'sopped bread', from Proto-Germanic *sauppa (compare Dutch sop, Old High German sopfa), deverbative of *sūpanan 'to sup'. More at sup; compare soup.