clutter
21clutter — I = clutter up clutter UK [ˈklʌtə(r)] / US [ˈklʌtər] or clutter up UK / US verb [transitive, often passive] Word forms clutter : present tense I/you/we/they clutter he/she/it clutters present participle cluttering past tense cluttered past… …
22clutter — 1 also clutter up verb (T) 1 to cover or fill a space or room with too many things, so that it looks very untidy: Piles of books and papers cluttered his desk. | be cluttered (up) with: The front room was cluttered up with ornaments and antique… …
23clutter — Permanent echoes, cloud, or other atmospheric echo on radar scope; as contact has entered scope clutter. See also radar clutter …
24Clutter — El asesinato de la familia Clutter fue inmortalizado en la nóvela periodística de Truman Capote: A Sangre Fría. Si bien la familia Clutter constaba de un matrimonio, tres hijas y un hijo, se suele referir únicamente a los cuatro miembros que… …
25clutter — Synonyms and related words: a mass of, a world of, abound with, army, arsy varsiness, ataxia, atmospheric attenuation, be alive with, bevy, blind spots, bristle with, bunch, burst with, chaos, cloud, confusion, covey, crawl with, creep with,… …
26clutter — clut|ter1 [ klʌtər ] noun uncount the mess created when there are too many things in a place clutter clut|ter 2 [ klʌtər ] or ,clutter up verb transitive often passive to put too many things in a place so that it looks messy: His bedroom was… …
27clutter — 1. noun 1) a clutter of toys Syn: mess, jumble, litter, heap, tangle, muddle, hodgepodge 2) a desk full of clutter Syn: disorder, chaos, disarray, untidiness, mess …
28clutter — [ˈklʌtə] verb [T] I ˌclutter sth ˈup to put too many things in a place so that it looks untidy II noun [U] clutter [ˈklʌtə] the mess created when there are too many things in a place …
29clutter — radiolokatoriaus trukdžiai statusas T sritis Gynyba apibrėžtis Nepageidautini signalai, atspindžiai ar atvaizdai ekrane, trukdantys stebėti reikiamus signalus. atitikmenys: angl. clutter; radar clutter pranc. fouillis; interférence; interférence… …
30clutter — I. verb Etymology: Middle English clotteren to clot, from clot Date: 1556 intransitive verb chiefly dialect to run in disorder transitive verb to fill or cover with scattered or disordered things that impede movement or reduce effectiveness < a… …