Crossword clues for decompress
decompress
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
The Collaborative International Dictionary
decompress \decompress\ v. i. to undergo the process of decompression.
decompress \decompress\ v. t. to subject to the process of decompression.
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Wiktionary
vb. 1 (context transitive English) To relieve the pressure or compression on something. 2 (context transitive English) To bring someone (such as a diver) back to normal atmospheric pressure after being exposed to high pressure. 3 (context transitive computing English) To restore compressed data to its normal size. 4 (context intransitive English) To adjust to normal atmospheric pressure after being exposed to high pressure. 5 (context intransitive informal English) To relax.
WordNet
v. restore to its uncompressed form; "decompress data" [syn: uncompress] [ant: compress]
decrease the pressure of; "depressurize the cabin in the air plane" [syn: depressurize, depressurise] [ant: pressurize, pressurize]
become less tense, rest, or take one's ease; "He relaxed in the hot tub"; "Let's all relax after a hard day's work" [syn: relax, loosen up, unbend, unwind, slow down] [ant: tense]
Usage examples of "decompress".
If it punctured with both air locks open, it would at the very least decompress the smaller ship, killing everyone on it and probably sucking two or three Marines into space before the emergency protocols closed the inner doors.
One time he decompressed a mouse from thirty atmospheres to surface pressure in three seconds, which would be like a diver going from a thousand feet to the surface at seven hundred miles an hour.
In the end they had to cut a gaping hole around the affected material, leaving the astro to do a decompressed reentry to the shuttle.
As well as the blowouts decompressing entire tubes, suited Mosdva shot at each other with beam and projectile weapons as they struggled to penetrate their enemy’s territory and disable critical systems.
That is how he learned about caisson disease, and how he learned the rule of thumb that most men will not suffer its symptoms if you have them decompress for a while at half the original air pressure.
By decompressing nine we'd save the air it held, when the hatch to eight was opened.
Sooner or later we'd have to go to the surface and that meant decompressing on the way up, the amount of decompression time depending on the depth attained and the length of time spent there.
When it ended, massively, in a great shoaling transit, a leap of decompressing force, they whispered in each other's ear, wordlessly, breathing odors and raw heat, small gusts of love.
We had six divers in a barometric pressure chamber, decompressing after a hundred-meter dive to a Nazi sub loaded with gold.
This was the power of her physical presence, of these nameless spins and tremors, that she was a mind and body able to empty out and in some decompressing play of painful craft eventually to refill herself, or so it seemed to those who watched as now the sheet completely parted, woman no longer rolling, face down on the twisted sheet, arms still bent up and tucked under her now.
Then the data has to be stored, deciphered, decompressed, formatted, protocoled, etc.
Despite multiple redundancies, air was either leaking or explosively decompressing all along this region of the Startree.
The corridor between the airlock and the ladder, where I had fought, was in section eight, now decompressed.