English

edit

Adjective

edit

encoded (comparative more encoded, superlative most encoded)

  1. Having a meaning that is different from a simple straightforward interpretation; acting as code for another meaning.
    • 2007, Joseph D Anderson, ‎Barbara Fisher Anderson, Moving Image Theory: Ecological Considerations, page 74:
      Curiously, background sound can be quite complex without becoming confusing, because it comprises elements that vary from very encoded to highly embodied.
    • 2013, G. Underwood, Attention and Memory, page 48:
      The data discussed above have considerable implications for the Liberman et al. (1967) theory of encodednes—consonants being very encoded and vowels being less encoded and therefore perceived continuously whereas consonants are perceived categorically.
    • 2021, Allen F Maxwell, The System is Unforgiving: Play by the Rules and Win:
      While sitting in the hospital, the captain asked me since I was the Ordnance Officer what should we do, and I told him we needed to report this immediaqtely, but we needed to report it in such a way that it didn't sound like it was as bad as it was. I crafted up a message and sent it out that night, and the message was very encoded as we wrote it.
    • 2022, Robert Wuthnow, Vocabularies of Public Life, page 179:
      The beginning of relative decline of New York City, financially and culturally, was also the point at which the artistic production turned from a very encoded, private, “talking to ourselves," abstract minimalism, to a more broadly intelligible narrative, decorative, realistic form of language across the different arts.

Derived terms

edit

Verb

edit

encoded

  1. simple past and past participle of encode
  NODES