| A | B |
| resolution1 | the act or process of resolving |
| resolution2 | the act of analyzing a complex notion into simpler ones |
| resolution3 | Middle English resolucioun, from Anglo-French or Latin; Anglo-French resolucion, from Latin resolution-, resolutio, from resolvere |
| resolution4 | the passing of a voice part from a dissonant to a consonant tone or the progression of a chord from dissonance to consonance |
| resolution5 | a formal expression of opinion, will, or intent voted by an official body or assembled group |
| resolution6 | the point in a literary work at which the chief dramatic complication is worked out |
| resolution7 | the process or capability of making distinguishable the individual parts of an object, closely adjacent optical images, or sources of light |
| resolution8 | a measure of the sharpness of an image or of the fineness with which a device (as a video display, printer, or scanner) can produce or record such an image usually expressed as the total number or density of pixels in the image |
| resolution9 | I will study at least one hour after I have finished my homework. |
| resolution10 | I will present myself in a manner that shows I have pride and confidence. |