Scales
/skeɪlz/
noun
A ladder; a series of steps; a means of ascending.
An ordered, usually numerical sequence used for measurement, means of assigning a magnitude.
“Please rate your experience on a scale from 1 to 10.”
Size; scope.
“The Holocaust was insanity on an enormous scale.”
verb
To change the size of something whilst maintaining proportion; especially to change a process in order to produce much larger amounts of the final product.
“We should scale that up by a factor of 10.”
To climb to the top of.
“Hilary and Norgay were the first known to have scaled Everest.”
To tolerate significant increases in throughput or other potentially limiting factors.
“That architecture won't scale to real-world environments.”
noun
Part of an overlapping arrangement of many small, flat and hard pieces of keratin covering the skin of an animal, particularly a fish or reptile.
A small piece of pigmented chitin, many of which coat the wings of a butterfly or moth to give them their color.
A flake of skin of an animal afflicted with dermatitis.
verb
To remove the scales of.
“Please scale that fish for dinner.”
To become scaly; to produce or develop scales.
“The dry weather is making my skin scale.”
To strip or clear of scale; to descale.
“to scale the inside of a boiler”
Synonyms: descale
noun
A device to measure mass or weight.
“After the long, lazy winter I was afraid to get on the scale.”
Either of the pans, trays, or dishes of a balance or scales.
noun
A device for measuring weight.
“The butcher put the sausages on the scales.”