Saturation in a sentence as a noun

In politics, it's why astroturfing works and why the more you spend on saturation advertising, the better your chances are.

The color saturation was wrong, the sound was like mono and the camera appeared slightly off so the very top or bottom of the screen was cut off.

No, I don't. This kind of argument is commonly advanced, but it neglects the opportunity cost of over-saturation causing people not to pay attention or care.

What about a smallish change in colour saturation or similar?\nreplygojomo 8 days ago | linkI was wondering the same thing.

We also have saturation in just about every market, filled by people who have recognized the small money and rejected it for the suffering it requires.

This allowed them to reach saturation on a campus-by-campus basis, until they had finally progressed far enough to reach a tipping point in society at large.

What’s the saturation point or the sustainable throughput according to the Universal Scalability Law?

But then they would just have had a few colors with more or less the sale lightness and saturation, but different hues, and there's really no intuitive reason why purple should be perceived as "more" or "less" than blue.

With the saturation of technology, we get these never-before-seen billion user companies.

The marketing campaign for the album was very conventional, indeed old-fashioned; straight-up saturation through old media channels like flyposters, billboards and TV.

Actually, people who have twice as much than that should be even happier, so I'll add some steps on top and say I'm a 6 right now".This sounds plausible to me because while the authors conclude there is no saturation point where income doesn't bring more happiness, this is a scale from 1 to 10 so surely some people must rate themselves a 10.

Saturation definitions

noun

the process of totally saturating something with a substance; "the impregnation of wood with preservative"; "the saturation of cotton with ether"

See also: impregnation

noun

the act of soaking thoroughly with a liquid

noun

a condition in which a quantity no longer responds to some external influence

noun

chromatic purity: freedom from dilution with white and hence vivid in hue

See also: chroma intensity vividness