Taper

Taper may refer to:

  • in the shape of a cone: conical
  • Fishing rod tapers, a measure of the flexibility of a fishing rod
  • In geometry, or in the casual description of a shape or object, a gradual thinning or narrowing towards one end (i.e., a conical profile)
  • Conically tapered joints, made of ground glass, are commonly used in the chemistry lab to mate two glassware components fitted with glass tubings
  • Luer Taper, a standardized fitting system used for making leak-free connections between slightly conical syringe tips and needles
  • Tapered thread, a conical screw thread. Made of a helicoidal ridge wrapped around a cone
  • Tapered crack, in concrete: a non through-penetrating fissure with a wedge shape
  • Machine taper, in machinery and engineering
  • Mark Taper Forum, a theatre in the Los Angeles Music Center
  • A ratio used in aeronautics, see Chord (aircraft)
  • A thin candle is called a taper
  • Philadelphia Tapers (also New York Tapers and Washington Tapers), a defunct professional basketball team
  • Taper (cymbal), the reduction in thickness of a cymbal from center to rim
  • Taper pin, used in manufacturing
  • Taper insertion pin, used in body piercing
  • Tapering, a period of rest before competition
  • A misspelling of Tapir, a large, pig-like mammal with a prehensile snout
  • A Taper (concert), A person who records audio concerts, usually via portable setup
  • A tapered steer tube on a bicycle
  • A taper is also a type of men's haircut.
  • In signal processing, a tapering function or window function

Taper as a surname:

  • Louise Taper, American historian
  • Mark Taper, American developer, financier and philanthropist

See also: Tapper (disambiguation)

Famous quotes containing the word taper:

    Now sit we close about this taper here,
    And call in question our necessities.
    William Shakespeare (1564–1616)

    The kind of Unitarian
    Who having by elimination got
    From many gods to Three, and Three to One,
    Thinks why not taper off to none at all.
    Robert Frost (1874–1963)