রন্ধ্র, গর্ত, ফাঁক, ফাটল, ছিদ্র
(1) A device that controls amount of light admitted.
(2) A natural opening in something.
(3) An man-made opening; usually small.
(4) An man-made opening.
(5) Usually small.
(6) Hole.
(1) I have found that the two most important factors are to have a wide aperture and a fast ISO, the wider and faster the better.
(2) For weeks, it was untouched, then I noticed that something had been pecking around the aperture .
(3) The genital aperture of an insect
(4) In combination, shutter speed and aperture are the gatekeepers that regulate the amount of light that gets to the film.
(5) It also means that its field of view is somewhat larger than another camera with a smaller aperture .
(6) As before, the images were taken with a constant focal length, lighting, aperture , and shutter speed.
(7) Some joints are already beginning to crumble and in other cases, the jointing mix was only applied as a veneer to the top of the joint aperture leaving a cavity underneath.
(8) If these exposure times do not produce the desired effect, change the lens aperture and test again.
(9) I placed it over me, slipping my head through the aperture at the top, and then ripping smallish holes in the side for my arms.
(10) Measure the height and width of the aperture , the distance between the bolt holes, and the overall size of the previous fitting.
(11) This same control changes the aperture when the camera is put into the A mode.
(12) When the rear asymmetrically split door is fully open its aperture creates another class winning feature.
(13) Over the years, my work with a pinhole as a camera aperture has unerringly led me on a path to the past.
(14) Even an in-focus image will exhibit some blurring due to the diffraction of light from the camera aperture .
(15) If too much is in focus, simply open the aperture , put on a longer lens, or move closer.
(16) There is, admittedly, a tradeoff - as in the photographic camera - between aperture and depth of field.
(17) I'm also considering drilling a bigger aperture into the thing.
(18) It was bare and whitewashed, with a small square aperture glazed with one cracked, dusty pane at its further end.
(19) She had wiggled through a tot-sized aperture in the alcove, and toddled over to a display of butterfly nets four feet away.
(20) This aperture is tellingly mounted atop the heaviest of steel doors, and when it closes, so too does The Circle.
opening
hole
gap
slit
slot
vent
crevice
chink
crack
interstice
orifice
foramen