释义 |
fingerprint
fin·ger·print F0129400 (fĭng′gər-prĭnt′)n.1. a. A mark left on a surface by a person's fingertip.b. An image of the ridges on a person's fingertip made by putting ink on the fingertip and pressing it against a surface or by using a digital scanning device.2. A distinctive or identifying mark or characteristic: "We can, from his retelling [of the incident], with its particular fingerprint of stresses and omissions, learn a great deal about him" (Mark Slouka).3. a. See DNA profile.b. A chemical fingerprint.tr.v. fin·ger·print·ed, fin·ger·print·ing, fin·ger·prints To take the fingerprints of.fingerprint (ˈfɪŋɡəˌprɪnt) n1. (Law) an impression of the pattern of ridges on the palmar surface of the end joint of each finger and thumb2. any identifying characteristic3. (Biochemistry) biochem the pattern of fragments obtained when a protein is digested by a proteolytic enzyme, usually observed following two-dimensional separation by chromatography and electrophoresisvb4. (Law) (tr) to take an inked impression of the fingerprints of (a person)5. (Pathology) to take a sample of (a person's) DNAfin•ger•print (ˈfɪŋ gərˌprɪnt) n. 1. an impression of the markings of the inner surface of the finger. 2. any unique or distinctive pattern that presents unambiguous evidence of a specific person, substance, disease, etc. v.t. 3. to take or record the fingerprints of. [1855–60] fingerprint Past participle: fingerprinted Gerund: fingerprinting
Imperative |
---|
fingerprint | fingerprint |
Present |
---|
I fingerprint | you fingerprint | he/she/it fingerprints | we fingerprint | you fingerprint | they fingerprint |
Preterite |
---|
I fingerprinted | you fingerprinted | he/she/it fingerprinted | we fingerprinted | you fingerprinted | they fingerprinted |
Present Continuous |
---|
I am fingerprinting | you are fingerprinting | he/she/it is fingerprinting | we are fingerprinting | you are fingerprinting | they are fingerprinting |
Present Perfect |
---|
I have fingerprinted | you have fingerprinted | he/she/it has fingerprinted | we have fingerprinted | you have fingerprinted | they have fingerprinted |
Past Continuous |
---|
I was fingerprinting | you were fingerprinting | he/she/it was fingerprinting | we were fingerprinting | you were fingerprinting | they were fingerprinting |
Past Perfect |
---|
I had fingerprinted | you had fingerprinted | he/she/it had fingerprinted | we had fingerprinted | you had fingerprinted | they had fingerprinted |
Future |
---|
I will fingerprint | you will fingerprint | he/she/it will fingerprint | we will fingerprint | you will fingerprint | they will fingerprint |
Future Perfect |
---|
I will have fingerprinted | you will have fingerprinted | he/she/it will have fingerprinted | we will have fingerprinted | you will have fingerprinted | they will have fingerprinted |
Future Continuous |
---|
I will be fingerprinting | you will be fingerprinting | he/she/it will be fingerprinting | we will be fingerprinting | you will be fingerprinting | they will be fingerprinting |
Present Perfect Continuous |
---|
I have been fingerprinting | you have been fingerprinting | he/she/it has been fingerprinting | we have been fingerprinting | you have been fingerprinting | they have been fingerprinting |
Future Perfect Continuous |
---|
I will have been fingerprinting | you will have been fingerprinting | he/she/it will have been fingerprinting | we will have been fingerprinting | you will have been fingerprinting | they will have been fingerprinting |
Past Perfect Continuous |
---|
I had been fingerprinting | you had been fingerprinting | he/she/it had been fingerprinting | we had been fingerprinting | you had been fingerprinting | they had been fingerprinting |
Conditional |
---|
I would fingerprint | you would fingerprint | he/she/it would fingerprint | we would fingerprint | you would fingerprint | they would fingerprint |
Past Conditional |
---|
I would have fingerprinted | you would have fingerprinted | he/she/it would have fingerprinted | we would have fingerprinted | you would have fingerprinted | they would have fingerprinted | ThesaurusNoun | 1. | fingerprint - a print made by an impression of the ridges in the skin of a finger; often used for biometric identification in criminal investigationsbiometric authentication, biometric identification, identity verification - the automatic identification of living individuals by using their physiological and behavioral characteristics; "negative identification can only be accomplished through biometric identification"; "if a pin or password is lost or forgotten it can be changed and reissued but a biometric identification cannot"loop - the basic pattern of the human fingerprintthumbprint - fingerprint made by the thumb (especially by the pad of the thumb)print, mark - a visible indication made on a surface; "some previous reader had covered the pages with dozens of marks"; "paw prints were everywhere" | | 2. | fingerprint - a generic term for any identifying characteristic; "that tax bill had the senator's fingerprints all over it"identification - evidence of identity; something that identifies a person or thing | | 3. | fingerprint - a smudge made by a (dirty) fingerfingermarkblot, smirch, smudge, daub, slur, smear, spot - a blemish made by dirt; "he had a smudge on his cheek" | Verb | 1. | fingerprint - take an impression of a person's fingerprintsreproduce - make a copy or equivalent of; "reproduce the painting" | Translationsfinger (ˈfiŋgə) noun1. one of the five end parts of the hand, sometimes excluding the thumb. She pointed a finger at the thief. 手指 手指2. the part of a glove into which a finger is put. (手套的)每一手指部分 (手套的)每一手指部分 3. anything made, shaped, cut etc like a finger. a finger of toast. 指狀物 指状物 verb to touch or feel with the fingers. She fingered the material. 用指觸碰 用指触碰ˈfingernail noun the nail at the tip of the finger. 手指甲 手指甲ˈfingerprint noun the mark made by the tip of the finger, often used by the police etc as a means of identification. The thief wiped his fingerprints off the safe. 指紋印 指纹印ˈfingertip noun the very end of a finger. He cut his fingertip by accident while preparing the salad. 指尖 指尖be all fingers and thumbs / my etc fingers are all thumbs to be very awkward or clumsy in handling or holding things. He was so excited that his fingers were all thumbs and he dropped the cup. 笨手笨腳 笨手笨脚have (something) at one's fingertips to know all the details of (a subject) thoroughly. He has the history of the firm at his fingertips. 瞭如指掌 了如指掌have a finger in the pie / in every pie to be involved in everything that happens. She likes to have a finger in every pie in the village. 參與一切事物 参与一切事物put one's finger on to point out or describe exactly; to identify. She put her finger on the cause of our financial trouble. 指出 指出fingerprint
roll a set of (finger)printsTo capture a copy of someone's fingerprints either using ink or some kind of digital scanning device. You're not under arrest, we just want to roll a set of prints to distinguish them from any others we might find at the crime scene. The immigration department now uses a digital scanner when they roll a set of fingerprints, making it much easier to keep track of people within the system.See also: of, roll, setroll (one's) (finger)printsTo capture a copy of one's fingerprints either using ink or some kind of digital scanning device. You're not under arrest, we just want to roll your prints to distinguish them from any others we might find at the crime scene. The immigration department now uses a digital scanner when they roll people's fingerprints, making it much easier to keep track of them within the system.See also: rollfingerprint
fingerprint, an impression of the underside of the end of a finger or thumb, used for identification because the arrangement of ridges in any fingerprint is thought to be unique and permanent with each person (no two persons having the same prints have ever been found). Palm prints and footprints are also used, especially for identification of infants. Traditionally, impressions have been taken from a person using ink and paper, but in live-scan fingerprinting electronic images produced by a video scanner are converted by computer into binary codes, which can be more readily compared. As an identification device, fingerprinting dates from antiquity, but modern systems began essentially with the work of Henry Faulds, William James Herschel, and Sir Francis Galton in the late 19th cent. Fingerprints gained acceptance as a more objective form of identification than visual recognition. The Galton method, elaborated by E. R. Henry, is still used in Great Britain and the United States. Juan Vucetich in Argentina, also using Galton as a guide, developed (1904) an alternate system that gained wide acceptance in Spanish-speaking countries. Fingerprinting for identification of criminals was first used in connection with the Bertillon systemBertillon system , first scientific method of criminal identification, developed by the French criminologist Alphonse Bertillon (1853–1914). The system, based on the classification of skeletal and other body measurements and characteristics, was officially adopted in ..... Click the link for more information. . Most countries now require that all criminals be fingerprinted. Methods have also been devised for developing fingerprint impressions left by criminals at the scene of a crime. The most common uses a brush and powder to mark the fingerprint, which is then photographed and lifted from the surface using tape. The reliability of fingerprints for criminal identification is complicated by the need to use crime scene prints that may be partial or distorted and by the technical competency of the person identifying the print (computer identification is often used as an aid). In 2002 a federal judge ruled that, because of inconsistencies in laboratory identification of fingerprints, fingerprint identification as practiced was not accurate enough to be used without qualification, and that an expert cannot testify that a person's fingerprints absolutely match those found at a crime, though an expert may point out similarity between two sets of prints and may state that no two people have identical prints. The judge reversed himself two months later, deciding that although the FBI's fingerprint identification procedures were not proven scientifically according to a strict standard they were nonetheless sufficiently reliable. In the United States, prints also are taken of civilian government employees and members of the armed forces and by some banks and other agencies. Some states now require a thumbprint when applying for a driver's license, and banks and check-cashing institutions are increasingly requiring a thumbprint before cashing checks, particularly in states that use license thumbprints. Some stores also require thumbprints when paying by check or even by credit card. A national fingerprint file and database is maintained by the Federal Bureau of InvestigationFederal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), division of the U.S. Dept. of Justice charged with investigating all violations of federal laws except those assigned to some other federal agency. ..... Click the link for more information. . Bibliography See C. Beavan, Fingerprints (2001), and S. A. Cole, Suspect Identities (2001). Technical works on the subject include H. C. Lee and R. E. Gaensslen, ed., Advances in Fingerprint Technology (2d ed., 2001), D. R. Ashbaugh, Quantitative-Qualitative Friction Ridge Analysis (1999), and D. L. Faigman et al., Modern Scientific Evidence (2d ed., 2002). fingerprint[′fiŋ·gər‚print] (analytical chemistry) Evidence for the presence or the identity of a substance that is obtained by techniques such as spectroscopy, chromatography, or electrophoresis. (forensic science) A pattern of distinctive epidermal ridges on the bulbs of the inside of the end joints of fingers and thumbs. An impression of a human fingerprint. fingerprint1. an impression of the pattern of ridges on the palmar surface of the end joint of each finger and thumb 2. Biochem the pattern of fragments obtained when a protein is digested by a proteolytic enzyme, usually observed following two-dimensional separation by chromatography and electrophoresis fingerprintA physical or electronic pattern. See fingerprint reader, acoustic fingerprint, virtual fingerprint, video fingerprint and signature. See fingerprintfingerprint
fingerprint an impression taken of the indents present on the finger tips. These have been used in the detection of crime since before the Fingerprint Bureau at Scotland Yard was established in 1901, relying on the hypothesis that no two people have the same fingerprint. The first conviction was secured in 1902. The process works by comparing distinctive features of the suspect print with a print found at the scene of the crime. Palm prints were used in 1931. In 2002 it was accepted that ear print evidence might be admissible but that scientific misgiving meant that it could be subject to critical cross-examination. The process is now computerized. See e.g. AUTOMATED FINGERPRINT IDENTIFICATION SYSTEM (AFIS). While the roots of the use of fingerprints are in criminal investigation, computerization means that the same concept and technology can be used for basic civilian identification purposes, even secure use of personal equipment.fingerprint
FingerprintIn technical analysis, a particular security's unique or unusual price movements. For example, a stock may have a tendency to move slightly upward when similar stocks are moving slightly downward. Any number of factors may cause this, but the factors are often unique to the company issuing the security. A fingerprint often has a pattern that technical analysts may detect and track in order to take advantage of fluctuations.fingerprint In technical analysis, the individual way that a particular stock trades. Technical analysts believe that an understanding of a security's fingerprint allows the investor to detect unusual variations in volume or changes in price that would signal a buying or selling opportunity.AcronymsSeeFGPTfingerprint
Synonyms for fingerprintnoun a print made by an impression of the ridges in the skin of a fingerRelated Words- biometric authentication
- biometric identification
- identity verification
- loop
- thumbprint
- print
- mark
noun a generic term for any identifying characteristicRelated Wordsnoun a smudge made by a (dirty) fingerSynonymsRelated Words- blot
- smirch
- smudge
- daub
- slur
- smear
- spot
verb take an impression of a person's fingerprintsRelated Words |