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blur <a blur; blurs> N

blur N

blur image COMPUT

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
The distinction between very large clusters and bulk solids is increasingly blurred.
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Over time, some of the distinctions between a town and a city have become blurred.
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The lines become very blurred here, as many of the tools overlap in functionality.
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The fundamental distinction between the flexion-lines and the fold-lines is often blurred, as fold-lines may permit some flexibility or vice-versa.
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Online identity stealth blurs the line on infringement of the rights of would-be victims to identify their perpetrators.
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Just as visual sociology sometimes blurs into something like art, in these projects, art expands into being a kind of visual sociology.
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As the band progressed, they began playing faster and faster, eventually developing a blur-type sound that could verge on experimental noise.
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The video is also a sign of how blurred the line between entertainment and exploitation has become.
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Brown said despite this, that night was and still is a blur.
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Some scholars believe that the network has blurred the line between private- and state- run news.
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