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Decode vs Ee - What's the difference?

decode | ee |

As verbs the difference between decode and ee

is that decode is while ee is .

As a noun ee is

.

decode

English

Noun

(en noun)
  • (cryptography) A product of decoding
  • * 2004 , David Cesarani, Holocaust: Responses to the Persecution and Mass Murder of the Jews , page 148
  • If and when the remaining Allied intercepts and decodes are opened up, we may expect to learn a great deal more about the later stages of the Holocaust.
  • * 2005 , Richard Breitman, U.S. Intelligence And The Nazis , page 31
  • The British picked up a decode in November 1942 indicating that guards at Auschwitz would need six hundred gas masks.
  • * 2006 , Ian Pfennigwerth, A Man of Intelligence , page 223
  • Decodes stating that Hollandia airfields were becoming overcrowded with IJA aircraft waiting to stage forward to Wewak led to pre-emptive strikes by Allied air forces and the destruction of more than 300 Japanese aircraft on the ground.
  • * 2011 , Hervie Haufler, Codebreakers' Victory , page 192
  • He was sure that references to AK in the intercepts stood for Midway, but none of the decodes made the identification certain.
  • (computing) Output from a program or device used to interpret communication protocols
  • * 1999 Laura Wonnacott, "Sniffer Pro sees some switches", Info World , page 37
  • This version includes more than 400 decodes' that cover everything from legacy '''decodes''' to popular '''decodes''' and new or updated ' decodes for such protocols as voice over IP H.323, Server Message Block, Border Gateway Protocol Version 4, and Internet Inter-ORB Protocol

    Verb

    (en-verb)
  • To convert from an encrypted form to plain text.
  • The cryptographer decoded the secret message and sent the result to the officer.
  • To figure out something difficult to interpret.
  • I finally managed to decode the nearly illegible doctor's prescription.

    Synonyms

    * decipher

    Antonyms

    * encode

    Derived terms

    * decoder * codec

    ee

    English

    Etymology 1

    Noun

    (een)
  • (Scotland, Northern England, and, archaic) An eye.
  • References
    *

    Etymology 2

    Interjection

    (en interjection)
  • (Northern England) eh
  • * 1975 , R. Chetwynd-Hayes, The Werewolf and the Vampire
  • Father advanced with outstretched hand and announced in a loud, very hearty voice: "Ee , I'm pleased to meet ye, lad.
  • * 2008 , Mavis Crawley, The Rolling Stone: Based on the True Story of My Life
  • 'Ee by gum lass we've seen nought of thee this many a long year, thou's a sight for sore eyes,' he said planting a kiss firmly on Mum's cheek...
    English palindromes English two-letter words ----