Definition & Meaning | English word FINE-TUNING


FINE-TUNING

Definitions of FINE-TUNING

  1. inflection of fine-tune

Number of letters

11

Is palindrome

No

15
FI
FIN
IN
ING
NE
NG
NI
NIN
TU
TUN
UN
UNI

389
EF
EFI
EFT
EG
EGF
EI
EIN
EIT
EN
ENF
ENG

Examples of Using FINE-TUNING in a Sentence

  • Some policy initiatives require approval by the legislative branch, but executive orders have significant influence over the internal affairs of government, deciding how and to what degree legislation will be enforced, dealing with emergencies, waging wars, and in general fine-tuning policy choices in the implementation of broad statutes.
  • More technically, the question is why the Higgs boson is so much lighter than the Planck mass (or the grand unification energy, or a heavy neutrino mass scale): one would expect that the large quantum contributions to the square of the Higgs boson mass would inevitably make the mass huge, comparable to the scale at which new physics appears unless there is an incredible fine-tuning cancellation between the quadratic radiative corrections and the bare mass.
  • Optimizing these exogenous pathways in unnatural systems takes iterative fine-tuning of the individual biomolecular components to select the highest concentrations of the desired product.
  • After a few months rehearsing and fine-tuning McFarlane's original compositions, the duo were invited to open for up-and-coming Glasgow band Lapsus Linguae, by their friend Iain Campbell, for Lapsus' sold-out New Year's Eve gig at King Tut's Wah Wah Hut.
  • An example of a fine-tuning problem considered by the scientific community to have a plausible "natural" solution is the cosmological flatness problem, which is solved if inflationary theory is correct: inflation forces the universe to become very flat, answering the question of why the universe is today observed to be flat to such a high degree.
  • The flatness problem (also known as the oldness problem) is a cosmological fine-tuning problem within the Big Bang model of the universe.
  • For the Coen brothers film O Brother, Where Art Thou? (2000), Deakins spent some two months fine-tuning the look, turning the lush green Mississippi landscape into a burnt, autumnal yellow and desaturating the overall image.
  • After much fine-tuning and on-set mishaps produce many of the show's running gags, The Simpsons resounding ratings and merchandising success makes the family extraordinarily wealthy; having moved out of their house on Evergreen Terrace to live in MC Hammer's former mansion, "Hammertime" (renamed "Homertime"), they expand their scope by working with David Geffen on a series of Grammy-winning, "mega-platinum" novelty albums.
  • In 2012, as part of the Atlantic hurricane reanalysis project, meteorologists identified a previously undocumented January hurricane and September tropical storm while fine-tuning the meteorological histories of several others.
  • The novel reveals that she was working on fine-tuning the speech of the robotic children in the Tring building that Scylla destroyed.
  • "Twiddling", the constant fine-tuning of online platforms that is part of the enshittification process.
  • Using his background in both philosophy and physics, he has developed a Fine-Tuning for Discoverability argument, in which he argues that many scientific constants are fine-tuned to optimize our ability to discover knowledge about the universe.
  • The headstock featured a flower-pot inlay similar to the L-5 archtop and most L5S models featured the L-5 trapeze tailpiece (though some had stop-bar or TP-6 fine-tuning tailpieces).
  • Matching Networks learn a network that maps a small labelled support set and an unlabelled example to its label, obviating the need for fine-tuning to adapt to new class types.
  • It is fitted with a Seymour Duncan "Iommi" humbucker, and adjustable string-through-body Schaller fine-tuning tailpiece.
  • Jon Caramanica, writing for Rolling Stone, commended Drag-On for emulating DMX's world-weary flow and fine-tuning his lyricism but felt that he squandered it when either compared to the album's guest artists or delivering generic party tracks.
  • The gondola was restored by Gianfranco “Crea” Vianello, a Venetian gondola builder from the island of Giudecca, who has supported Hai in his pursuit to become a gondolier and mentored him in fine-tuning his rowing technique.
  • In particular, it conceptualises a transformative ecosystem as an open adaptive network with critical transitions and turnover, with resident species heuristically learning and fine-tuning their niches and roles in a multiplayer eco-evolutionary game.
  • It has been also suggested based on in vitro studies that HAND2 and its associated antisense long noncoding RNA HAND2-AS1 (partially overlapping HAND2 first exon and regulatory promotor region), may have an essential role in fine-tuning mesenchymal-to-epithelial/endothelial (MET) plasticity.
  • While bows remained in use long after the development of firearms, technological fine-tuning along with the development of the matchlock allowed firearms to supersede even the feared Welsh and English Longbow as the ranged weapon of choice for infantry during the late renaissance and early modern period.



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