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BNC: 45044 COCA: 23489

nanosecond

1 ENTRIES FOUND:
nanosecond /ˈnænəˌsɛkənd/ noun
plural nanoseconds
nanosecond
/ˈnænəˌsɛkənd/
noun
plural nanoseconds
Learner's definition of NANOSECOND
[count]
technical : one billionth of a second毫微秒
: a very short time一瞬间
BNC: 45044 COCA: 23489

nanosecond

noun

nano·​sec·​ond ˈna-nə-ˌse-kənd How to pronounce nanosecond (audio)
-kənt
1
: one billionth of a second
2
: a very brief moment

Did you know?

The nonserious use of nanosecond is probably much more common than the proper technical use. In measurement terms such as nanosecond, nanogram, and nanometer, nano- means "billionth;" in other kinds of words, its meaning isn't quite so precise. In computers, the speed of reading and writing to random access memory (RAM) is measured in nanoseconds. By comparison, the speed of reading or writing to a hard drive or a CD-ROM player, or for information to travel over the Internet, is measured in milliseconds (thousandths of a second), which are a million times longer than nanoseconds.

Example Sentences

It happens in less than a nanosecond. a nanosecond was about all that it took her to accept his marriage proposal
Recent Examples on the Web Asked if this award could lead to their opening another Curate or expanding into a new destination, Button squashes that idea in a nanosecond. Gary Stern, Forbes, 12 July 2022 The gnocchi crackle against the teeth for a nanosecond before dissolving. Los Angeles Times, 30 June 2022 Much of the planet may be loosening coronavirus restrictions, but China, which can lock down a city in a nanosecond, is ever vigilant. Stephanie Yang, Los Angeles Times, 8 Feb. 2022 In its latest project, called Vault, prime archival pieces are dusted off for online sale — a venture that is mostly an exercise in frustration as Vault objects sell out in about a nanosecond. Robin Givhan, Washington Post, 15 Nov. 2021 Data is now distributed to global investors within a nanosecond, a very different world from the late 1990s. Jacob Wolinsky, Forbes, 11 Oct. 2021 The video flies by in a nanosecond, cutting between students from one school to the next. Mary Carole Mccauley, baltimoresun.com, 19 Nov. 2021 The stone-age minds of voters evolved for eons to deal with hunter-gatherer societies but have been forced to address modern politics for only an evolutionary nanosecond. Washington Post, 19 Nov. 2021 The role of FinOps (financial operations) is important in an on-premises or traditional environment, as well as in the cloud where automation can drive costs through the roof in a matter of a nanosecond. Jeffrey Ton, Forbes, 6 May 2021 See More

Word History

Etymology

International Scientific Vocabulary

First Known Use

1958, in the meaning defined at sense 1

Time Traveler
The first known use of nanosecond was in 1958
BNC: 45044 COCA: 23489

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