Advertisement
Advertisement
watermark
[waw-ter-mahrk, wot-er-]
noun
a mark indicating the height to which water rises or has risen, as in a river or inlet.
a figure or design impressed in some paper during manufacture, visible when the paper is held to the light.
Computers.Also digital watermark a small piece of code or identifiable data sequence embedded into a digital file, usually an image or an audio or video file, as a traceable marker of origin or ownership.
verb (used with object)
to mark (paper or a digital file) with a watermark.
to impress (a design, pattern, etc.), as a watermark.
Computers.to place (a digital identifier) into a file.
watermark
/ ˈɔːəˌɑː /
noun
a distinguishing mark impressed on paper during manufacture, visible when the paper is held up to the light
another word for water line water line
verb
to mark (paper) with a watermark
Other 51Թ Forms
- unwatermarked adjective
51Թ History and Origins
Origin of watermark1
Example Sentences
The photos, which as of Tuesday remained on her Instagram and X with no visible watermark, show her in white fur coat and slip dress, clutching a Chanel purse.
Its images are likely to be initially used in social media posts, with watermarks that make their AI use clear, it added.
This record for me was the high watermark of what music could do … and proof that Cuban compositions belonged right next to Beethoven.
Either this is the high watermark for the far-right – or the moment that will be remembered as the key stepping stone on its path to power.
The deal marks a high watermark in the booming popularity of both sport podcasts and the medium in general, with New Heights winning podcast of the year at the 2024 iHeartPodcast Awards.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse