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tracking
[ trak-ing ]
tracking
/ ˈٰæɪŋ /
noun
- the act or process of following something or someone
- electrical engineering a leakage of electric current between two points separated by an insulating material caused by dirt, carbon particles, moisture, etc
- the way wheels on a vehicle are aligned
- a function of a video cassette recorder, which adjusts the alignment of the heads in order to achieve the best possible audio and video reproduction from each recording
Other 51Թ Forms
- ·ٰiԲ noun
Example Sentences
Former Conservative defence and Foreign Office minister Tobias Ellwood has warned that the UK is "behind the curve" in tracking Russia's deep-sea operations.
“Since appearing on the Canary Mission website in February, I had begun to be afraid that I could be targeted for violence,” Öztürk said, referring to an organization tracking pro-Palestinian student ideology.
“Not tracking the data doesn’t make the climate crisis any less real,” she said.
Focused primarily on health, by tracking 14,500 children born between 1991 and 1992, it has revealed insights into obesity, autism and, more recently, the effect of the pandemic on mental health.
But whether the plate readers are placed in South L.A. or wealthier areas, police officials say concerns about mass tracking of motorists are overblown.
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