0 present participle of clock
1 to take a particular time exactly to do or complete something:
2 to show or reach a particular speed or distance on a measuring device:
3 to hit someone, especially on the head or face:
Among the variables concerned with the clocking there are a few that merit special mention.
The speed of computation, however, is not only measured by clocking hardware; it also depends on numerical stability, and for iterative methods, on convergence rates.
Clocking in at almost 600 pages, the book is packed with data and analyses of utmost importance to any student of creole languages and related phonomena.
L emma 12 more or less tells us how to carry out the clocking.
Are we to have a system of "clocking on", as it were, when we leave on a walk and "clocking off" when we return?
What is to stop us from clocking in and then clearing off again?
While one is waiting to go to court, the gas meter is clocking up and a very considerable debt can begin to accumulate.
There was a cynical clocking up of the hours.