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freeze frame
noun
- an optical effect or technique in which a single frame of film is reprinted in a continuous series, which when shown gives the effect of a still photograph.
- a button or other mechanism on a projector, videocassette system, etc., allowing one to stop the projected picture at any point.
freeze-frame
noun
- films television a single frame of a film repeated to give an effect like a still photograph
- a single frame of a video recording viewed as a still by stopping the tape
verb
- tr to make a freeze-frame of (an image)
Other Words From
- freeze-frame adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of freeze frame1
Example Sentences
The film opens with a shaky, grainy YouTube video of Chris and his friends blowing up a mailbox, his joyful, childlike face captured in freeze frame as he’s running away.
A freeze frame of a frozen-faced Biden — taken from his wretched debate performance — loomed from the big screen in the convention hall like a geriatric gargoyle.
He featured prominently in a pro-Trump political ad titled “Joe Biden’s middle finger,” which ended on a freeze frame of Boada making the gesture while leaving his initial arraignment.
The backdrop painted for the Mattel headquarters boardroom reveals a tweaked version of the L.A. skyline that you’d have to freeze frame to notice.
Hungarian-born Krausz, whose team generated the first ultra-fast pulses in the early 2000s, has likened attosecond physics to a fast-shutter camera where the short light flashes allow a freeze frame look within the microcosm.
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