Latch in a sentence as a noun

Plus, actual impostors are just as likely to latch onto advice like this.

I hacked the most prevalent hotel locks, but the latch on my gate constantly outsmarts me. Limited domain knowledge is a thing!

Let's face it, the main purpose of such rankings is to provide a pecking order for wider society to latch onto.

Personally I think actual impostors are more endemic and just as likely to latch onto advice like this.

For starters, it uses 'latch' and 'latch-free' probably a hundred times, in lieu of the ubiquitous'lock' and 'lock-free' .

A lock is only as good as the latch, and door that it's sitting in, and the hinges attaching the door, and the molding surrounding it, and the wall it's in.

Latch in a sentence as a verb

Unfortunately many people are going to latch on to the examples in his demo movies, and the important parts of the essay will fly over their heads.

So we make a visualisation of what amounts to a sliding latch when when have the touch screen, pure genius, nobody besides Apple could have thought of that, right?

I have a feeling subconsciously we all want Apple to fail at something and try to latch on to anything remotely blamable.

While I don't think for a second that you're promoting 3d transforms as something that everyone should be using for everything... some people out there really will latch onto it as a "cool thing" and abuse it.

But if you happen to swallow two tiny rare earth magnets, what can happen is that they latch together on opposing sides of loops of small intestine, gradually digging their way through the tissue and spilling gut bacteria into the abdominal cavity, which results in sepsis.

Latch definitions

noun

spring-loaded doorlock that can only be opened from the outside with a key

noun

catch for fastening a door or gate; a bar that can be lowered or slid into a groove

verb

fasten with a latch; "latch the door"