| truncate | shorten, cut short | en | (fiil) | en |
| truncate | To cut off; to lop; to maim | en | en |
| truncate | Appearing as if cut off at the tip; as, a truncate leaf or feather | en | en |
| truncate | make shorter as if by cutting off; "truncate a word"; "Erosion has truncated the ridges of the mountains" | en | en |
| truncate | approximate by ignoring all terms beyond a chosen one; "truncate a series" | en | en |
| truncate | replace a corner by a plane terminating abruptly by having or as if having an end or point cut off; "a truncate leaf"; "truncated volcanic mountains"; "a truncated pyramid | en | en |
| truncate | make shorter as if by cutting off; "truncate a word"; "Erosion has truncated the ridges of the mountains" approximate by ignoring all terms beyond a chosen one; "truncate a series" replace a corner by a plane terminating abruptly by having or as if having an end or point cut off; "a truncate leaf"; "truncated volcanic mountains"; "a truncated pyramid | en | en |
| truncate | to make something shorter = shorten (past participle of truncare, from truncus; TRUNK) | en | en |
| truncate | To discard or lose one or more characters from the beginning or end of a value, whether intentionally or unintentionally | en | en |
| truncate | The dropping of digits or characters from one end of a data item causing loss of accuracy or information | en | en |
| truncate | To cut off the beginning or end of a series of characters or numbers | en | en |
| truncate | A string can be truncated if it exceeds the maximum length of 80 characters in the following applications: cross references, sorting with IRM (if a sort order table is enabled, the maximum length of a string is 38 characters), some forms of output of comparisions of word lists | en | en |
| truncate | Truncating is when something is removed to make it compatible with something smaller A decimal number can often be truncated to an integer by removing the decimal digits | en | en |
| truncate | to shorten a word, using a special symbol to replace letters at the end of a word This allows one search to retrieve singular or plural forms or different spellings of a word or name | en | en |
| truncate | The apex or base of a structure that is flat or ends abruptly It appears to be cut off | en | en |
| truncate | Ending abrubtly The end appears cut-off straight across | en | en |
| truncate | To cut off leading or trailing digits or characters from an item of data without regard to the accuracy of the remaining characters | en | en |
| truncate | To insincerely leave unranked alternatives who will therefore be counted as equal and lower than all ranked alternatives This is one type of burying strategy | en | en |
| truncate | having the end shortened or squared off | en | en |
| truncate | Removing the oldest data (that is, Time Stepss before the Horizon) from the History | en | en |
| truncate | abruptly ending as if cut off | en | en |
| truncate | A method of formatting data by removing characters at the end of the data that do not conform to the format desired | en | en |
| truncate | apex appearing to be cut off straight across (Lawrence) | en | en |
| truncate | Ending abruptly as though cut off at a right-angle | en | en |
| truncate | To shorten a word to its root In searching databases, a truncation symbol, such as ? or *, can be used to find several words with the same root For example, m?n finds men and man; find* searches for find, finder, finding, finds | en | en |
| truncate | To cut, to shorten - for example, "truncate a file after line 10" means to remove all lines after line 10 | en | en |
| truncate | (SQL*Plus User's Guide and Reference) | en | en |
| truncate | Ending abruptly as if cut off | en | en |
| truncate | replace a corner by a plane | en | en |
| truncate | terminating abruptly by having or as if having an end or point cut off; "a truncate leaf"; "truncated volcanic mountains"; "a truncated pyramid" | en | en |