Dictionary
to buffer
noun
Someone or something that buffs.
Exact(55)
"Elmo, Ms. Millerr said, "was never meant to buffer".
Federal regulators ordered them to raise a combined $75 billion to buffer their potential losses.
At the United Nations, France has sought to buffer Iraq from American ire.
"That helps a lot to buffer the changes in the industry".
But Warhol also used machines to buffer his interactions with other people.
"For now, many oil-exporting economies have substantial reserves to buffer extended periods of low prices.
Mr. Hakes said that the government's toughest task is finding a way to buffer the swings between surplus and scarcity.
Why should you have to wait a full ten seconds for "Expendables 2" to buffer before it plays?
Or they might fear the conflict going to court would generate, without a lawyer to buffer them.
At least in the short run, dependent traits seemed to buffer the relationships in times of crisis, the authors suggest.
Similar(1)
Fig. 3 a Effect of sample-to-buffer ratio on Zn reduction illustrating increase in sensitivity with increasing sample-to-buffer ratio.
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