0 past simple and past participle of decrypt
1 to change electronic information or signals that were stored, written, or sent in the form of a secret code (= a system of letters, numbers, or symbols) back into a form that you can understand and use normally:
A hedge is consistent if the hedge only contains pairs of names and pairs of encrypted messages that cannot be decrypted by the environment.
These are intuitively hedges that are reduced as far as possible, in the sense that no pair of messages in them can be decrypted using the information in the hedge.
What does he have to say about e-mails that are encrypted and decrypted by drug dealers?
Even this—the power to demand that data be decrypted—is simply a necessary response to new technologies.
How much information can be decrypted?
Allied code breakers decrypted radio signals relating to the convoy's departure and subsequent intercepts allowed radio traffic analysts to follow its progress south.
A key is used to encrypt and decrypt whatever data is being encrypted/decrypted.
This unit successfully decrypted, translated, and analyzed these foreign signals, and turned that raw information into useful intelligence reports during the course of the war.