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push-pull
[ poosh-pool ]
noun
- Radio. a two-tube symmetrical arrangement in which the grid excitation voltages are opposite in phase.
adjective
- of or relating to electronic devices having components with balanced signals opposite in phase.
push-pull
noun
- using two similar electronic devices, such as matched valves, made to operate 180° out of phase with each other. The outputs are combined to produce a signal that replicates the input waveform
a push-pull amplifier
51Թ History and Origins
Origin of push-pull1
Example Sentences
“It was about negotiating the push-pull between speed and stasis,” says Lund.
The urban push-pull of “Paris Street, Rainy Day” becomes the recreational play of looking at art.
Many of the people I spoke to about the push-pull of company demands vs. worker desires mentioned — or at least alluded to — the importance of trust.
The band say they put "immense pressure" on themselves to perfect the record, fixating on its push-pull dynamics, adding extra layers of context, and experimenting with new instruments.
“A Real Pain”: Writer-director Jesse Eisenberg and Kieran Culkin, in perhaps career-best performances, play mismatched Jewish cousins whose push-pull dynamic plays out in both funny and affecting ways as they travel to Poland to visit the childhood home of their beloved late grandmother, a Holocaust survivor.
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