0 past simple and past participle of scale
1 to climb up a steep surface, such as a wall or the side of a mountain, often using special equipment:
2 to remove tartar (= hard white substance) and plaque (= soft substance in which bacteria breed) from teeth:
To remove this effect the state variables can be scaled.
So, our model has a specific resistance of 0.0725(-) at a (scaled) speed of 0.42(-).
The hexagons were scaled with eccentricity to evoke focal responses of comparable amplitude in normal subjects.
It scaled back its ambitions and began to emphasize the distribution of profits.
The profiles were scaled using several normalizations, including local mean values, local boundary-layer edge values, and upstream boundary-layer edge values.
The tangent vectors are scaled to a fixed length.
This equation can be scaled into a standard form in order to eliminate some of the distracting constants.
Therefore, frequency counts in the children's corpora had to be scaled to be comparable to adult frequency counts.