0 past simple and past participle of scramble --
1 to move or climb quickly but with difficulty, often using your hands to help you: --
2 to put things such as words or letters in the wrong order so that they do not make sense: --
3 to change a radio or phone signal so that it can only be understood using a special device --
4 to (cause a plane to) take off very quickly: --
A helicopter was scrambled within minutes of the news.
A 2 x 2 x 2 mixed-design was used with bilingualism and text structure (normal or scrambled) as betweensubjects factors with 24 participants per condition.
Then we will prove that a tame system has no scrambled pair.
By the second rank, significant structure develops with real overlaps floating above scrambled-zero overlaps but remaining statistically similar to conserved-zero overlaps.
The 60 sentences were presented in scrambled order.
The problems were relatively easy when the words were scrambled, although monosyllabic constructions were easier than the others.
The scrambled case is derived by a movement transformation, so its representation contains a trace.
This would be true even if the cortical representation were completely scrambled.
By contrast, (3b) shows that an element scrambled long distance cannot serve as the antecedent of a lexical anaphor.