glitch 英 [glɪtʃ]   美 [ɡlɪtʃ]

glitch

glitch  英 [glɪtʃ] 美 [ɡlɪtʃ]

n. 小故障;失灵;[电子] 短时脉冲波干扰 

名词复数:glitches 

Unfortunately, in our society, after age 25 or so, many folks begin to focus on any glitch in memory as evidence for its demise. 不幸的是,在我们的社会,在25岁左右或者更大些,许多人开始关注在记忆方面的任何故障作为其死亡的证据。
But if there's radio interference or some other glitch with either the patch or the pump, there could be serious health consequences. 但是,如果发生了无线电干扰,或是大胶布(智能创可贴)和输送泵其中任一出现了小故障,都会导致人身健康的严重后果。

  • A glitch is a problem or malfunction, usually a temporary one, in a system or machine. Your science fair team might experience a major glitch in your plans if you lose your data tables as the result of a computer glitch.
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  • n. 小故障;失灵;[电子] 短时脉冲波干扰
  • 1. Unfortunately, in our society, after age 25 or so, many folks begin to focus on any glitch in memory as evidence for its demise.

    不幸的是,在我们的社会,在25岁左右或者更大些,许多人开始关注在记忆方面的任何故障作为其死亡的证据。

  • 2. But if there's radio interference or some other glitch with either the patch or the pump, there could be serious health consequences.

    但是,如果发生了无线电干扰,或是大胶布(智能创可贴)和输送泵其中任一出现了小故障,都会导致人身健康的严重后果。

  • 3. So that explains one of our glitches here, but we have another glitch, and that second glitch comes between nitrogen and oxygen.

    那么我们的第一种小偏差已经解释清楚了,但是我们还有另外一种,它在氮和氧之间发生。

  • glitch (n.) by 1953, said to have been in use in radio broadcast jargon since early 1940s, American English, possibly from Yiddish glitsh "a slip," from glitshn "to slip," from German glitschen, and related gleiten "to glide" (see glide (v.)). Perhaps directly from German. Apparently it began as technical jargon among radio and television engineers, but was popularized and given a broader meaning c. 1962 by the U.S. space program.
glitch / ɡlɪtʃ ; NAmE ɡlɪtʃ / noun ( informal) a small problem or fault that stops sth working successfully 小故障;小毛病;小差错 glitch glitches glitch / ɡlɪtʃ ; NAmE ɡlɪtʃ /
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