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capture
[ kap-cher ]
verb (used with object)
- to take by force or stratagem; take prisoner; seize:
The police captured the burglar.
Synonyms: nab, grab, apprehend, snare, arrest, catch
Antonyms: release
- to gain control of or exert influence over:
an ad that captured our attention;
a TV show that captured 30% of the prime-time audience.
- to take possession of, as in a game or contest:
to capture a pawn in chess.
- to represent or record in lasting form:
The movie succeeded in capturing the atmosphere of Berlin in the 1930s.
- Computers.
- to enter (data) into a computer for processing or storage.
- to record (data) in preparation for such entry.
noun
- the act of capturing.
Synonyms: apprehension, arrest, seizure
Antonyms: release
- the thing or person captured.
- Physics. the process in which an atomic or nuclear system acquires an additional particle.
- Crystallography. substitution in a crystal lattice of a trace element for an element of lower valence.
capture
/ ˈkæptʃə /
verb
- to take prisoner or gain control over
to capture a town
to capture an enemy
- (in a game or contest) to win control or possession of
to capture a pawn in chess
- to succeed in representing or describing (something elusive)
the artist captured her likeness
- physics (of an atom, molecule, ion, or nucleus) to acquire (an additional particle)
- to insert or transfer (data) into a computer
noun
- the act of taking by force; seizure
- the person or thing captured; booty
- physics a process by which an atom, molecule, ion, or nucleus acquires an additional particle
- Also calledpiracy geography the process by which the headwaters of one river are diverted into another through erosion caused by the second river's tributaries
- the act or process of inserting or transferring data into a computer
Derived Forms
- ˈcapturer, noun
Other Words From
- captur·a·ble adjective
- captur·er noun
- pre·capture adjective verb (used with object) precaptured precapturing
- un·captur·a·ble adjective
- un·captured adjective
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of capture1
Example Sentences
The final would prove to be a ground-breaking moment for the women's game, with the momentum propelled by a photographer capturing an image which transcended sport.
"If we can streamline that process, then we'll be able to capture data more easily -- and help shed new light on how pregnant people actually eat."
These networks shared a common feature: Each molecular network had two forms of "memory" storage that captured information learned from the environment.
Desert beetles and lizards, for example, have evolved to develop surface structures that have both hydrophilic and hydrophobic areas and effectively capture moisture from the air.
Would she have been open to the idea of cameras capturing moments like these?
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