1. scaled - Adjective
2. scaled - Verb
4. scaled - Adjective Satellite
of Scale
Covered with scales, or scalelike structures; -- said of a fish, a reptile, a moth, etc.
Without scales, or with the scales removed; as, scaled herring.
Having feathers which in form, color, or arrangement somewhat resemble scales; as, the scaled dove.
Source: Webster's dictionaryAccording to Dennard scaling transistor dimensions are scaled by 30% (0.7x) every technology generation, thus reducing their area by 50%. Source: Internet
A COVID-19 testing row erupted this week after scaled up its testing capability to 93,000 per day while the UK was still managing fewer than 10,000. Source: Internet
Addressing modes The new addressing modes added scaled indexing and another level of indirection to many of the pre-existing modes, and added quite a bit of flexibility to various indexing modes and operations. Source: Internet
Addressing modes could involve up to two displacements and two memory indirections per operand as well as scaled indexing, making the longest conceivable instruction 23 bytes. Source: Internet
After having scaled back the initial cost of the PWA, Franklin Delano Roosevelt agreed to include the PWA as part of his New Deal proposals in the "Hundred Days" of spring 1933. Source: Internet
And as Impossible Foods and Beyond Meat have scaled, they’ve also encountered increasing opposition from people uncomfortable with the fact that we mass-produce food at all. Source: Internet