See also: linefeed

English

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Noun

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line feed (plural line feeds)

  1. On a typewriter, the action of the carriage roller to push the page up one or more lines, often simultaneously with executing a carriage return.
  2. (computing) The character (0x0a in ASCII) which advances the paper by one line in a teletype or printer, or moves the cursor to the next line on a display.
  3. (broadcasting) A signal that contains the content about to be broadcast on radio or television.
    • 1964, Ian K. Mackay, Broadcasting in Nigeria, page 30:
      It appears that Director Chalmers was the only one who, while reading the final draft, noticed that the wording of one clause required the Post Office to provide a line feed to each station.
    • 2003, Gil Murray, Nothing On But the Radio, page 33:
      Playing a “gig” in Toronto at the time, Lombardo and his boys arrived at RB to do a live line feed to New York for their regular dance-band series on CBS, just at a mement when Baker's one and only amplifier was in full use on CFRB's own air, broadcasting a lucrative locally-sponsored program of recorded music.
    • 2017, Ivan Cury, Directing and Producing for Television, page 281:
      The edited output of the picture is then sent out as the “line feed."

Translations

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Verb

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line feed (third-person singular simple present line feeds, present participle line feeding, simple past and past participle line fed)

  1. To advance the page one line at a time, particularly in rapid succession.

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See also

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Anagrams

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  NODES
Note 1