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video

 - 5 dictionary results

vid⋅e⋅o

[vid-ee-oh]
–noun
1. Television.
a. the elements of television, as in a program or script, pertaining to the transmission or reception of the image (distinguished from audio ).
b. the video part of a television broadcast.
2. Informal. videotape.
3. Informal. television: She is a star of stage and video.
4. a program, movie, or the like, that is available commercially on videocassette.
5. music video.
–adjective
6. of or pertaining to the electronic apparatus for producing the television picture: video amplifier.
7. of or pertaining to television, esp. the visual elements.
8. of or pertaining to videocassettes, videocassette recorders, music video, etc.: a video shop.
9. pertaining to or employed in the transmission or reception of television pictures.

Origin:
1930–35; < L vidē(re) to see + -o as in audio

music video

–noun
a commercial videotape featuring a performance of a popular song, often through a stylized dramatization by the performers with lip-synching and special effects.
Also called video, video record.
Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2009.
Cite This Source Link To video
vid·e·o   (vĭd'ē-ō')   
adj.  
  1. Of or relating to television, especially televised images.

  2. Of or relating to videotaped productions or videotape equipment and technology.

  3. Computer Science Of or relating to the production of images on video displays.

n.   pl. vid·e·os
  1. The visual portion of a televised broadcast.

  2. Television: a star of stage, screen, and video.

  3. A videocassette or videotape, especially one containing a recording of a movie, music performance, or television program.

  4. A music video.

  5. Computer Science The appearance of text and graphics on a video display.


[From Latin videō, first person sing. present tense of vidēre, to see; see vide.]
The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition
Copyright © 2009 by Houghton Mifflin Company.
Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
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Word Origin & History

video  (adj., n., pref.)
1935, as visual equivalent of audio, from L. video "I see," first person singular present indicative of videre "to see" (see vision). Videotape (n.) is from 1953; the verb is 1959, from the noun; videocassette is from 1971; video game is from 1973. Videocassette recorder is from 1971, now usually VCR (also 1971).
Online Etymology Dictionary, © 2001 Douglas Harper
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Computing Dictionary

video graphics
Moving images stored as a sequence of static images (called "frames") representing snapshots of the scene, taken at regularly spaced time intervals, e.g 50 frames per second. Apart from the frame rate, other important properties of a video are the resolution and colour depth of the individual images.
Video data is typically stored and transmitted in a format that includes synchoronised sound.
The many file formats in use for video differ chiefly in the type of compression used. Compression is even more important for video that for static images due to the large amount of data involved in even a short video. Furthermore, compression allows video to be transmitted via a channel whose bandwidth is less than the raw data rate implied by the resolution and frame rate. This allows the recipient to start displaying the video before the transmission is complete, a process known as streaming.
(2008-05-23)

The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing, © 1993-2007 Denis Howe
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