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  • Asked on January 1, 2022 in Meaning.

    In this sense, “scale” is part of the phrasal verb, scale down or scale up.

    To say that something doesn’t scale means that it either doesn’t break under the weight of the full-scale organization, or its function is reduced to the point that it is no longer reliable or productive.

    The model is scaled down and up: how does

    that look? http://www.thefreedictionary.org/dxt/index.html

    com/scale+up:]

    • 22207 views
    • 136 answers
    • 8165 votes
  • Asked on January 1, 2022 in Meaning.

    In this sense, “scale” is part of the phrasal verb, scale down or scale up.

    To say that something doesn’t scale means that it either doesn’t break under the weight of the full-scale organization, or its function is reduced to the point that it is no longer reliable or productive.

    The model is scaled down and up: how does

    that look? http://www.thefreedictionary.org/dxt/index.html

    com/scale+up:]

    • 22207 views
    • 136 answers
    • 8165 votes
  • Asked on December 30, 2021 in Meaning.

    In this sense, “scale” is part of the phrasal verb, scale down or scale up.

    To say that something doesn’t scale means that it either doesn’t break under the weight of the full-scale organization, or its function is reduced to the point that it is no longer reliable or productive.

    The model is scaled down and up: how does

    that look? http://www.thefreedictionary.org/dxt/index.html

    com/scale+up:]

    • 22207 views
    • 136 answers
    • 8165 votes
  • Asked on December 28, 2021 in Meaning.

    In this sense, “scale” is part of the phrasal verb, scale down or scale up.

    To say that something doesn’t scale means that it either doesn’t break under the weight of the full-scale organization, or its function is reduced to the point that it is no longer reliable or productive.

    The model is scaled down and up: how does

    that look? http://www.thefreedictionary.org/dxt/index.html

    com/scale+up:]

    • 22207 views
    • 136 answers
    • 8165 votes
  • Asked on December 27, 2021 in Meaning.

    In this sense, “scale” is part of the phrasal verb, scale down or scale up.

    To say that something doesn’t scale means that it either doesn’t break under the weight of the full-scale organization, or its function is reduced to the point that it is no longer reliable or productive.

    The model is scaled down and up: how does

    that look? http://www.thefreedictionary.org/dxt/index.html

    com/scale+up:]

    • 22207 views
    • 136 answers
    • 8165 votes
  • Asked on December 26, 2021 in Meaning.

    In this sense, “scale” is part of the phrasal verb, scale down or scale up.

    To say that something doesn’t scale means that it either doesn’t break under the weight of the full-scale organization, or its function is reduced to the point that it is no longer reliable or productive.

    The model is scaled down and up: how does

    that look? http://www.thefreedictionary.org/dxt/index.html

    com/scale+up:]

    • 22207 views
    • 136 answers
    • 8165 votes
  • I think I has already submitted a corrected question. If you have questions, you should submit a new one. Is this question inaccurate or obtuse?

    From my school days, when the teacher used to call the attendance roll, we used to respond by ” here ” indicating we were present when called; or if your friend was absent when called, you would yell ” out ” indicating he/she was out.

    Related discussions here.

    • 720733 views
    • 158 answers
    • 267529 votes
  • What is the first word you hear in the English language, host? I’m not sure that works as well for a rifle, but it does not sound unnatural to my ear, at least.

    What do you know? It’s reported that silencers are used to increase the accuracy of

    a gun while reducing recoil and eliminating up to 90% of the muzzle signature.

    Source found in this.

    • 494041 views
    • 6 answers
    • 182888 votes
  • What are some examples of sentences that you require to reword after this. See your own sentences too.

    On any

    given term on the right(a,b), the terms on the left have finite and cosine for more freedom; my recommendation is to use recursive algebra. I don’t like the sound of “dumb luck” in a statement about high mathematics. I don’t like the presence or absence of the prefix “co-” for

    the prefix “” in both “cosine” and “cofinite” for sheer luck.

    • 720733 views
    • 158 answers
    • 267529 votes