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envelope

noun

  1. packaging item, usually made of thin flat material
  2. function describing the extremes of an oscillating signal
L14400 on Wikidata ↗

Wiktionary

Pronunciation: /ˈɛnvə(ˌ)ləʊp/ / /ˈɒnvə(ˌ)ləʊp/ / /ˈɒnvləʊp/ / /ɛnˈvɛləp/

noun

Etymology: PIE word *h₁én From French enveloppe. The engineering sense is derived from flight envelope. The verb is from the noun.

  1. A paper or cardboard wrapper used to enclose small, flat items, especially letters, for mailing.

    Now we are liberal with our innermost secrets, spraying them into the public ether with a generosity our forebears could not have imagined. Where we once sent love letters in a sealed envelope, or stuck photographs of our children in a family album, now such private material is despatched to servers and clouds operated by people we don't know and will never meet.

  2. Something that envelops; a wrapping.
  3. A bag containing the lifting gas of a balloon or airship; fabric that encloses the gas-bags of an airship.

    They have no internal or external support structure, being simply a fabric bag (or envelope) filled with a lighter than air gas. Inside the envelope are one or more "ballonets", or smaller bags, which help maintain the envelope's shape.

  4. A mathematical curve, surface, or higher-dimensional object that is the tangent to a given family of lines, curves, surfaces, or higher-dimensional objects.
  5. A curve that bounds another curve or set of curves, as the modulation envelope of an amplitude-modulated carrier wave in electronics.
  6. The shape of a sound, which may be controlled by a synthesizer or sampler.
  7. The information used for routing a message that is transmitted with the message but not part of its contents.
  8. An enclosing structure or cover, such as a membrane; a space between two membranes
  9. The set of limitations within which a technological system can perform safely and effectively.

    push the envelope

    Few of the lads had ever been in combat and they knew little about the critical tolerances of fighter aircraft during violent maneuvers. They knew where the outside of the envelope was, but they didn't know about the part where you reached the outside and then stretched her a little . . .

  10. The nebulous covering of the head or nucleus of a comet; a coma.
  11. An earthwork in the form of a single parapet or a small rampart, sometimes raised in the ditch and sometimes beyond it.

    make a blind all along the bottom of the ditch of the Envelope

verb

Etymology: See envelop.

  1. Archaic form of envelop.

    Again, if the plane of the impressed couple intersects the mean plane between N and C, it will envelope the cone whose focals are ON, ON′, and whose internal axis is therefore OA.