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Discover LudwigThe phrase "frozen screen" is correct and commonly used in written English.
It refers to a computer or electronic device display that has become unresponsive and appears stuck on one image or page. Examples: - "I couldn't finish my assignment because my laptop had a frozen screen." - "Her phone suddenly had a frozen screen, and she couldn't access any of her apps." - "The video game kept crashing, resulting in a frozen screen every few minutes." - "I had to restart my computer multiple times to fix the frozen screen issue."
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The game loads up fine, then two or so minutes later, bam! Fuzzy frozen screen all over again.
And there's the frozen screen, when all appears just fine but nothing works.
Scenes often proceeded so slowly that viewers were close to contacting their broadband suppliers about a frozen screen.
In a panic, she covered the projector with her hands, preventing the class from seeing the frozen screen.
Like many latecomers to computing, his instinctive reaction, when faced with a balky Web page or a frozen screen, is to click furiously and open more windows, thereby exacerbating the problem.
"I, Laura Pettitte, do depose and state, in 1999 or 2000, Andy told me had a conversation with Roger Clemens in which Roger admitted to him using human growth hormones," the text said on the frozen screen, as the judge spoke privately to lawyers on both sides.
Similar(46)
He was here to tell us that the future of home entertainment is the Internet, despite its tiny, frozen screens.
Lentiviral particles are produced to create frozen "screen-sized" stocks of infected cells.
Further, the ability to infect with virus and then freeze "screen-sized" aliquots of cells eliminates the need for reinfection before every experiment and minimizes this potential variable.
Recently, he was in the back of a taxi, doing a phone interview, and the cab driver – "who was sixtysomething, grey-haired" – showed Knutsson his own smartphone with the Candy Crush game frozen on screen.
Everyday life is changed by the availability of cold beverages, hot water, frozen fish, screened windows, bottled cooking-gas, or the refrigerator.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com